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Pines creep up a mountain on the road to Rotorua |
After the cave tour we set out across sheep and cow country
for Rotorua, about 2 hours away. The
road is pretty scenic and not heavily trafficked. Rotorua is very touristy and a lot of places
were booked because of the long weekend.
We used the ISite office to find lodging. ISites are the NZ tourism board sites, very
helpful places for booking lodging, tours and activities and picking up maps. We walked from our hotel over to a trail
along the river that feeds into Lake Rotorua.
A young girl helped us find it – she was a saucy lass on her way from
her cousin’s to her brother’s hoping she didn’t get grounded for being home
late. She is the youngest of 14, the
rest all brothers. She wanted to know
whether we had ever seen a gold Lamborghini in the US.
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Former landfill, now walking path in Rotorua |
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Former bath house, now museum in Rotorua |
The walk was interesting, but long to downtown. It led through a former sulfur mining site
and later town dump that was being reclaimed as a natural area. It looked pretty hellish in the thermally
active sections with steam and sulfurous gases rising from the yellow and white
earth. Apparently one entrepreneur built an inexpensive bath, but it had to close down after several patrons drowned having passed out from the noxious gases that built up in the bathing rooms. The walk ends downtown at the
very nice looking Polynesian spa and the museum housed in the Edwardian era
bath house. It is surrounded by bowling
greens, croquet grounds and a rose garden.
Downtown has lots of shops and restaurants but seemed very quiet for a
holiday weekend. We ate at Capriccio, a
small Italian pizza place in town. We
ended up chatting with Richard and Sarah, a couple from South Hampton, England
who are also in NZ for a month. They
seemed to have been all over the world from the Galapagos to Pocomoke, MD to Australia. She and I chatted about Words with Friends,
while he and Jake discussed golf. They
are also sailors.
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Prince's Feather geyser at Te Puia |
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Lowering food to be cooked in a steam vent |
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Tourists face Maori warriors |
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Very buff Maori |
The next day we went to Te Puia, a Maori thermal reserve
just outside of town. They offer a Maori
cultural experience which although touristy, was fun and somewhat
informative. A tourist is chosen as the
group’s chief and one of the Maori “chiefs” makes sure they are coming in peace
and welcomes them. After a brief display
by the warriors everyone files into the ceremonial house to watch several
styles of dancing and singing. There is
voluntary audience participating for a couple dances.
You can then wander around the thermal area which has
bubbling pools of mud, geysers, steam
vents etc. It’s all very civilized but
reasonably well interpreted. There is also a carving school where you can watch
students learning to do traditional carvings and ask questions.
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boiling mud |
We drove from Rotorua about 80 km to Taupo on a huge
lake. The town is as touristy as Rotorua
but maybe slightly more oriented towards adventure tourism and fishing. We didn’t stop at any of the thermal sites
outside of town although there were many.
Seen one boiling mud pool seen them all?
It’s been very hard to choose among sites and still leave enough time to
relax and not spend all day driving.
We got information on camping around the lake at the ISite
and got groceries and an iced coffee for me in town. We camped at a small holiday park in Motouapao
on the west side of the lake almost at the south end. We got a small camp site overlooking the
water. There seem to be a lot of permanent privately owned sites within this
little park and some very cute converted VW vans. We are sandwiched between an unoccupied very
large tent attached to a camper and a Jucy rental van. It seems very quiet so far at least with just
the sound of the birds and cicadas and a little background traffic noise from
Rt. 1(Do all route 1’s have a lot of
traffic?).
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black swan on Lake Taupo |
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View from our Lake Taupo camp site |
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Cabin at Motuepa Holiday Park, see converted VW cabin in background |
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Lone goat, not sure why it was stationed there but it had a great lake view |
On Tuesday we packed up our wet tent (because of course it
started raining during the night) and headed back up to Taupo. After hanging out at a café for a while we
drove the short distance to Huka Falls, a gorge through which the Waikato River
passes on its way to Auckland (NZ’s longest river). It really was an impressive sight, seeing
this pale blue water rush through the gorge.
Apparently kayakers will sometimes attempt passage, but we didn’t get to
see that.
A little downstream the river is dammed for hydroelectric
power with timed releases of water below.
We made our way to
RapidsJet, a jetboat ride that goes along the river
below the dam. Jetboats were invented in NZ and go very fast. It's sort of a thrill ride involving lots of fast turns, jetting over rapids and back up rapids and getting soaked. The guide did give us a little history about the river pointing out where some scenes from the Yogi bear movie were filmed and how they filmed the barrel over the falls scene in the second Lord of the Rings movie. Most interesting to me was the clear cutting of pines along the banks of the river. According to our guide the pines were planted after ranchers discovered the soil lacked nutrients needed to keep cattle healthy. Many generations of pines have been planted and harvested. Now though they have better fertilizers available so they are starting to bulldoze out the pine roots and replant pasture grasses. So goes another cycle of farming.
1 comment:
I hope no Amelia Bedelia gets the idea that by eliminating New Zealand's black swans the world might be saved from unexpected disasters. (ref. Black Swan, by economist Nassim Taleb). Although the world pays most attention to the bad black swans, good black swans are equally or more important.
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