It's been a few days since I've blogged so I'm trying to remember what we've done the last few days - it's been action-packed! On Sunday we explored the Rotorua/Lake Taupo geothermal region. We were kinda choosy about what we did as we've already been to Yellowstone and the geysers and pools there are pretty amazing.
The unidentified white birds! |
Then we headed to a living Maori village called (and make sure you say this out loud and replace "Wh" with a "f" sound to say it properly!) - "Whakarewarewa". Check out their website here:
http://www.whakarewarewa.com. Our Maori guide, nicknamed Annie, was excellent, and told us about the residents' everyday life. The steam cooking methods are really interesting - they just place their roasts and vegetables, even puddings, inside their geothermal cook ovens outside their homes, and the ovens work like slow cookers, almost never overcooking the food! Annie said that the villagers share the ovens and often the meals as well. They also bathe in some of the warm pools there, which are steaming all around their homes. Some of their relatives lived through the Mt Tarawera eruption in the late 1880's, which destroyed several villages closer to the volcano. We also checked out their cultural performance in the afternoon, and saw our first "Haka" dance, the warrior dance, where the guys stick out their tongues and try to look threatening. Our performers were more funny than scary though :)Back on the road heading south to Lake Taupo, we stopped at another geothermal hotspot, the Waimangu Volcano Valley. From here, we got a spot on view of Mt Tarawera, which erupted in 1886 and created the Waimangu Volcanic Valley - the youngest geothermal spot in the world. The largest geyser in the world, the Waimangu Geyser also erupted in 1900 and killed a few visitors in 1904. Barry and I both felt a little uneasy as we walked through this steaming, bubbling valley, as we had witnessed a rare major eruption of the Steamboat geyser in Yellowstone in about 2005. It hadn't erupted for several years and freaked us all out!
Anyway, nothing like that happened on this day, thankfully! On to Lake Taupo, a huge caldera lake created after a giant volcanic eruption thousands of years ago. Man, you just can't escape volcanos in New Zealand!
Had a great supper in Taupo, looking out over the lake. It is as big as an inland sea, and we watched a beautiful sunset there. Our suppers were delicious - had steak grilled on a super heated lava stone - yum!
remember Barry...A video of you doing the haka dance...!!! :-)
ReplyDeleteI think the white birds are domesticated geese, and the greyish ones may be Nene (Hawaiian geese). I checked for white birds on NZ birder sites but didn't find anything unusual.
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