McCrain's in Middle Earth
A travel dialogue of our adventures in New Zealand

In February 2004, Jim and Kathy McCrain began a five month oddessy in New Zealand. Kathy was transferred to Auckland for a temporary work assignment, and Jim followed her for moral support. (Isn't he just the greatest husband?) What follows is Jim's account of this adventure.


Rotorua: Thermal Capitol of New Zealand

June 12, 2004

Kathy and I took a trip to Rotorua, New Zealand this weekend. Rotorua is known for several things, but chief amongst them is the enormous hot springs and thermal areas in the region. Only three hours southeast of Auckland, this area is home to literally hundreds of hot springs, hot pools and lakes, mud pots, boiling pots, and geysers. We didn't expect there to be as much diversity and abundance of thermal features as we found. The area is very reminiscent of America's Yellowstone National Park, although on a much smaller scale. The thermal features found in both places are very similar. The only two things that make me like Yellowstone better is that Yellowstone has more of everything, and they are all in one location. In Rotorua, all of the different thermal features are located on private land, so a separate"entrance fee" is charged at each location. That can get quite costly if you want to see a lot of them!

Of course, there are more things to do in Rotorua than just visit the thermal areas. Kathy and I like to go hiking and we both love trees, so we spent a good portion of our first day walking through more forests. Imagine our surprise when we found a grove California Redwood trees! Yes, you read that correctly! There is a very large grove of California Redwoods growing in Rotorua. They were planted in an experimental forest back in 1864. Surprisingly, they really "took root" and grew amazingly fast. It has been proven that these trees grow at a rate three-times faster than in the United States. When Kathy and I first got to the forest, we could smell that old familiar smell that only comes from the floor of a redwood forest. It was like "a little bit of home" during our stay in this country.

After visiting the redwoods, we hiked around a couple of lakes. Blue Lake is smaller than Green Lake, but they are both very beautiful. The trail around Blue Lake is gentle and well-graded. The trail around Green Lake is rough, un-tended, over-grown, and steep. Still, the views that we got from both trails was worth all of the effort. And then we saw Lake Tarawera. This lake was enlarged (not formed) by the eruption of Mt. Tarawera in 1886. During this eruption, several Maori villages were buried and lost. Over one hundred people were known to have perished, and an untold number were also lost. Several of the villages were never found again. But the resulting enlarged lake today offers some spectacular views, as well as a number of very tall waterfalls.

It was a very busy and tiring first-day in Rotorua. Little did I know at the end of the day that there was so much more to come!




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