They prepared really badly...
They probably slept where they could off the trail .
The first battle of Kokoda occurred on July 23, 1942. The second battle began on August , 1942. The entire Kokoda Track campaign lasted from July 21st to November 16th.
The Kokoda Trail Campaign or Kokoda Track Campaign ,located in Papua , New Guinea , was a series of battles fought between July and November 1942 between Japanese and mostly Australian combatants .
The Kokoda Track is a road in Papua New Guinea, famous for being the site of a World War II battle. There is much debate over whether it should be called the Kokoda Track or Kokoda Trail; however, in 1972, it officially became the Kokoda Trail.
The Kokoda Track was vital to Australia during WWII, as the Japanese troops were repelled by the Australian and US troops during the Kokoda Trail campaign. Japan had already landed troops on the island of New Guinea, and sought to head south through the Owen Stanley Ranges to establish bases on the southern coast of the island. The PNG natives offered invaluable assistance to the Allied troops along the Kokoda Track, often at great risk to themselves. The Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels were a tribe of Papua New Guinean native people nicknamed for their thick, woolly hair. The Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels helped Australian soldiers during WWII in the 1942 battles against invading Japanese troops. They lived in the villages along the Kokoda Track and initially knew nothing of the war until Australian troops began moving through their area. They carried wounded out of the jungle, on stretchers and on their backs, and nursed them back to health where possible, at the risk of their own lives. They also carried supplies and equipment for the Australian troops. Stories have also emerged of these natives rescuing US airmen who were shot out of the sky. They evacuated allied troops from compromising situations during alerts of Japanese invasions, or hid them from advancing troops. Not only did they nurse the wounded back to health, but many Allied troops fell victim to the diseases of the tropical jungle, such as malaria - the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels also nursed them through that.
The Japanese troops were repelled by the Australian and US troops during the Kokoda Trail campaign. The PNG natives offered invaluable assistance to the Allied troops, often at great risk to themselves.
The Kokoda Trail was a footpath going thru the OWEN STANLEY RANGE in the islands of New Guinea, just north of Australia. US & Australian (ANZAC) forces defeated Japanese troops, in a series of campaigns, as the Japanese tried working their way to the New Guinea coastlines, during WWII. Australian troops, upon arriving in Vietnam, apparently brought with them, their battle lineage from the Kokoda Trail.
They probably slept where they could off the trail .
Battles began in July of 1942 and continued for six months resulting in the death of about 6,500 Japanese troops versus 725 Australians. Hundreds on each side were casualties of disease.
Australian reservist stopped the Japanese advance on Port Moresby. Finally regular troops arrived from the middle east and force the Japanese to withdraw.
The Kokoda Trail or Kokoda Track gets its name from the village of Kokoda, which is at one end of the trail. Owens Corner is the town at the other end.
The first battle of Kokoda occurred on July 23, 1942. The second battle began on August , 1942. The entire Kokoda Track campaign lasted from July 21st to November 16th.
The Kokoda Trail Campaign or Kokoda Track Campaign ,located in Papua , New Guinea , was a series of battles fought between July and November 1942 between Japanese and mostly Australian combatants .
The Kokoda Trail Campagin was a WWII pacific battle between the Japanese and Allied forces (made primarily up of Australian troops) on the island of Papua New Guinea. This trail is one of the most rugged and harsh environments in the southern hemisphere. There were 625 allied soldiers killed and over 6,500 Japanese killed. There were also over 4,000 allied soldiers that fell ill. The allies ended up pushing back the Japanese forces.
1931
The Kokoda Trail runs from Buna, on the north coast of New Guinea, to Port Moresby on the south coast, though jungle and over the Owen Stanley Mountains. The Japanese, turned back from Port Moresby in the Battle of the Coral Sea by the US Navy in May, 1942, decided to try an overland approach to taking the capital of New Guinea via the Kokoda Trail. The Japanese troops were ill prepared for this trek and a great many perished and the rest were starving by the time they reached the vicinity of Port Moresby. There they encountered Australian and American troops, the Australians some Home Defense units and regulars returned from North Africa, and the Americans of the newly arrived 32nd Infantry Division. The skeletal Japanese were pushed back over the Owen Stanleys, some resorting to cannibalism, and a few reached the north coast at Buna and Gona, where a battle ensued to seize the northern terminus of the Trail from them.
The two ends of the Kokoda Trail are at Kokoda and Owers Corner sixty miles apart.