Tag Archives: waikato

Waitomo

One place we visited that had nothing to do with volcanoes was Waitomo Caves. The caves were set in dense rainforest, and is famous for their glow worms. I have been to some of these caves before but since then they have opened up some new caves – we were able to visit three of them.

Waitomo Caves

Waitomo Caves

They weren’t the biggest caves I had ever seen, but they did have some lovely details.

Waitomo Caves

Waitomo Caves

Waitomo Caves

One of them you descend into by a giant corkscrew ramp, and had suspended walkways to keep you above the wet floor. Now that’s engineering.

Waitomo Caves

Waitomo Caves

The Kiwis are good like that, very creative, out of the box thinkers, and you see evidence of it everywhere. Sorry to say, but often Aussies seem like square pegs in comparison.

Waitomo Caves

Well, we’ve come to the end of our geological tour of NZ, and all the travel posts too. I’ll be posting about things much closer to home from now on, which isn’t all bad, because 4 months of travelling was very exhausting.

Taupo

Down the road from Rotorua in Taupo, they make use of the geothermal energy by building powerstations.

Taupo Geothermal Power Station

The raging Waikato river (shown below at Huka Falls), means that there are also hydroelectric power stations too.

Huka Falls

Huka Falls

One needs only to look at the vastness of Lake Taupo, the result of a supervolcano eruption, and whose vast caldera is still active underground, to know that there’s certainly energy available, but if that volcano was to erupt again, then we’d all be in big trouble.

Lake Taupo

Lake Taupo

Rotorua – Part 3

But there are advantages to living in a geothermal area. One is that you can have free hot water. The city has been using the underground hot water sources since Maori times. The Maoris bathed and cooked their food in the hot water (at different temperatures of course). The Europeans followed suit, and opened a spa resort. No, health spas aren’t a modern invention – the Victorians were addicted to them. Rotorua has preserved its oldest, set in this mock Tudor mansion.

Government Gardens

It is now a museum and not a spa resort, but inside you do get an idea of how grand it all was. People came from all over the world to experience its ‘cures’.

Rotorua Museum

The treatments offered back in the day were pretty extreme. Swims, soaks and showers at various temperatures, hot towel wraps, massages, electricution and x-rays (to stimulate the blood), and literal mud baths in the dank basement!

Rotorua Museum

Added to that a meagre diet, drinking disgusting mineral water, and taking a walk by the lake, and you’d be good as new (or so they say) whatever your ailment. Personally, I’d stick to a simply massage and spa.

Rotorua – Part 2

Aside from geysers, there were plenty of geothermal attractions all over the place. In some places you really did need to watch where you were going lest you fall into a pool of hot, acidic mud.

Wai-o-tapu

Hell's Gate

The mineral rich pools came in all shades, no food colouring involved.

Wai-o-tapu

Wai-o-tapu

Wai-o-tapu

In other places, the landscape created by all of this turmoil was very pretty.

Hell's Gate

Waimangu

There were plenty of stories told by our various guides, particularly from the 19th Century when a local volcano, Mount Tarawera, erupted, destroying much of the area and killing many people. It could happen again, and soon. Despite this, Rotorua is one of the North Island’s bigger towns being a centre for forestry, energy and tourism. It goes to show that the locals must be hardy types.

Hell's Gate

Rotorua – Part 1

Next we explored the geothermal wonderland that is Rotorua. Seeing a geyser come into life is a good introduction of what’s underneath the city. The Lady Knox Geyser erupts every day at 10.15am, with a bit of human intervention.

Lady Knox Geyser

From then on it took a couple of minutes to bubble up.

Lady Knox Geyser

Lady Knox Geyser

And then burst into life.

Lady Knox Geyser

Lady Knox Geyser

Not a bad start to the tour. Certainly don’t see anything like this in Australia.

Hobbiton

When the first of the Lord of the Rings movies came out more than a decade ago, my brother and I were quite enchanted by it all. So when we did a tour of the North Island a few months later, we tried our hardest to find the set for the village of Hobbiton. It’s where the little hobbits (who were half the size of humans) lived their quiet lives. Well, until the wizard Gandalf proposed an adventure.

We heard that it was somewhere near the Waikato town of Matamata, so on our way to Rotorua, we tried driving down the country roads nearby Matamata to find it. The landscape roundabouts was certainly similar to what we saw in the movie, but try as we might, we couldn’t find the movie set.

Nowadays Hobbiton is a part of the North Island tourist route. I was excited to find out that it was part of our tour. Hobbitses! Its entrance is inconspicuous enough.

Hobbiton

Hobbiton

The tours were all guided, so our tour guide directed our bus down the driveway, past paddocks of sheep (the property is still a working farm).

Hobbiton

Until we came to the village…

Hobbiton

Yes, it was Hobbiton, with little hobbit holes, lovingly recreated…

Hobbiton

Hobbiton

Vege patches and a shed…

Hobbiton

Hobbiton

Beehives and the party tree…

Hobbiton

Hobbiton

Even a watermill and the Green Dragon pub (serving hobbit-style ales).

Hobbiton

Hobbiton

Even though everything except the pub were exteriors, the level of detail was astounding. It must have costed a fortune, and from what the tour guide told us it did. Why? Because Peter Jackson, the man behind Lord of the Rings and all of this, was um, obsessed. He wanted to get everything right, especially the details. The tree above Baggins End (Bilbo and Frodo’s place), for example, was constructed from a tree cut down from elsewhere on the farm that he had liked. Because the leaves of the original tree weren’t quite right, he had artificial leaves imported from Taiwan and hand-sewn on!

Hobbiton

But the movies made so much money that all the production excesses simply didn’t matter in the end – they recouped the costs half way through the cinema run of the first movie and ended up making a profit many times over. Which is all very un-hobbit-like. Nevertheless, I (and lots of other fans) are glad they decided to open up the village, because I certainly found it delightful.

Hobbiton

Mining in the Coromandel

Being on a geology tour, we had to visit a mine or two. Coromandel is rich in resources. In fact, they had their own gold rush around about the same time as the Australian one in the 19th Century. Nowadays the only kind of mining that’s really viable is the open cut mine. This one in Waihi extracts mostly silver, and it’s actually very small compared to the giant iron ore mines in Australia.

Waihi Mine

Perhaps there may be a future miner/engineer/geologist among this lot?

Waihi Mine

Coromandel

Next we took a drive to the Coromandel Peninsula, about 3 hours out of Auckland. The scenery is typical of the Waikato region, rolling farmland with rainforested hills and gorges.

Coromandel Peninsula

Hot Water Beach

Our destination for the afternoon was Hot Water Beach.

Hot Water Beach

It’s where groundwater heated by all the geothermal action is exposed on the beach. The only tricky thing is that it’s only at one place on the beach that is best accessed at low tide. We got there a bit too late for a hot bath, but it didn’t stop the boys from trying.

Hot Water Beach

Hot Water Beach

I was more entranced by the twilight. It was magical.

Hot Water Beach