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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

NZ Days 27, 28, 29


June 1
Day – Rotorua Town, Museums, Gift Shops, Church
Night – Lake Otakawa DOC camp site

June 2
Day - Rotorua Town with Hil and JV
Night – Rotorua Thermal Holiday Park

June 3
Day - Rotorua Town, internet business, Drive East
Night – Matata DOC camp site
 
Thoughts on St. Faith Anglican Church:  We were allowed no pictures within the church, but we took pictures on the outside.  Hilary was able to get photos from the inside of another church in Tikitiki later on, and both are quite similar.  Churches that we visited here in Aotearoa are a blend of cultures…

St. Faith Anglican Church was stunning, reminded me of the hale pule at the Royal Mausoleum in Hawaii.  Very native feel with each pew intricately carved, eyes made from paua shell, the walls of the church were tukatuka style with thin wood beams corded together with strands of flax.  The ceilings were decorated with Maori symbols of the koru and the stained glassed windows of Maori guardians/ ancestors.  Visitors were able to see what it was/would be like within a Maori marae (where tourist are not allowed).  Jesus was engraved in one of the stained glassed windows, elevated a bit above the real scenic waters of Lake Rotorua.  He was also wearing a Maori cloak of feathers.  It was like the two worlds, Christianity and Maori combined in a unique balance.  The priestly pulpit had carved Maori guardians holding it upright.  It was a beautiful sight.  Next to the church stood a traditional Marae that the public was not allowed to go into.  There were also many steam vents that even leaked through the sewage waterways and also surrounding hot steam baths.  Rock piles spewed out steam and large pipes helped the steam to escape.  The locals around the area used/uses the steam for creating heat, energy, and also as a source for cooking.     

Te Puia Museum (too expensive to enter, so Ryan and I stayed in the very culturally rich gift shop and learned a lot there!)  Out side of the museum was a large kauri tree, which was lying on it’s side.  The plaque described how the kauri tree was the land form of the sperm whale in Maori mythology…like how everything is connected in the land and the sea.  The plaque began with “Kua hinga te kauri o te wao nui a Tane,” (the kauri has fallen in the sacred forest of Tane) and went on to describe parallels between the kauri tree and the sperm whale.  Whale oil was used as a binding agent for paint and oil from the kauri tree was also used for the pigmentation of tattooing (moko).  The whale oil was used to anoint the dead and was a core component in Maori medicine.  Jawbones from the sperm whale was used for weaponry and also to mark status of high ranking chiefs.  The stomach of the sperm whale, like the kauri gum was used for dental hygiene and called “kauri tawhiti” “kauri from a distance.”  Kauri and whale oil were both used for fire starting, heating, and lighting.

In the gift shop there were many wood carvings that were created by the students of Te Puia.  Ryan and I were overwhelmed with the mana that each craft displayed.  We also learned of the art of moko or traditional Maori tattooing.  After the design is “chiseled” into the skin, a blue pigment dye is placed in the grooves.  It was a unique sight to see many photographs of chiefly men and women, whose faces were intricate moko designs.   

Part of the reason we stayed in Rotorua so long was to catch some incoming swells on the East later that week.  To be honest, it wasn't what we thought it would be.  Too much tourism and focus on "activities".  Also everything was sooo expensive.  We left on the third day and made it to the Matata DOC park along the ocean.  The weather was nasty, bad rains and howling winds, but the temperature outside (and in the van) was much much warmer!

Hil and JV's restaurant in Rotorua

A beautiful museum, the exhibit of which we wanted to see was closed :(

A Waka, or Wa'a back home

Closeup of the Waka front

So similar to home

Geothermal vents everywhere

St. Faith Church

Ryan in front of Lake Rotorua

Looking at water naturally near boiling temperature

 A few ducks

NZ Day 26

May 31
Day – Drive to Rotorua, Brief tour of town
Night – Lake Otakawa DOC camp site

I don’t know how to describe Mount Maunganui.  It is a “fun” and “friendly” place, for a lack of better words.  Coffee shops, boutique shops, and standard shopping outlets lined the streets.  The area is a mixture of a retirement community and a Kiwi weekend vacation spot.  It is definitely peaceful with a nice ocean backdrop.  There is a beachfront walking path, and a beautiful hike to the top of the Mount adjacent to the Holiday Park.  To be frank however, it was like any other coastal town in a developed nation, and didn’t have too much draw for U’I or I.  The showers and bathrooms at the holiday park were nice, but by mid-morning, U’I and I were ready to get on the road see more of what NZ had to offer.  Hil and J were dying to relax with some down time (driving all the time does get really old), so we parted ways and decided to meet in Rotorua the following day.  U’I and I headed out of town, through the busting port of Tauranga (the largest city on the Bay of Plenty, bordering Mount Maunganui), and into the mountains bound for the old “cultural” area of Rotorua, not too sure what to expect. 

The drive was really nice, going through several reserves at the bottom of a gorge.  The road eventually dropped into a basin, on the west coast of Lake Rotorua.  We drove through the town, checking out some of the places we planned to visit the following day.  We continued on to the south region of the lake and drove an additional 5km to Lake Otakawa where our DOC campsite was located.  The lake and campsite were beautiful and well kept.  We were the only ones there, and watched the sun go down serenaded by black swans and small birds.  Peaceful times, though it got extremely cold in the van that night (no heaters without power and no power at DOC sites).  We bundled up with everything we could.  The down comforters kept our bodies warm, but anything exposed (faces, noses, fingers, or toes that might creep out) went numb quickly. 

Sunrise, Mt. Maunganui

Lake Otakawa DOC site, 5km from Rotorua

Feeding the locals

How sweet is that rainbow sweater?

 Life in the fast lane

It's getting cold in here

 Ready for a freezing night in the van

NZ Day 25


May 30
Day – Hike to Wentworth Waterfall, drive south
Night – Mount Maunganui Beachside Holiday Park

In the morning, we embarked on a multiple hour hike through the mountains, ending at a spectacular two-tier hundred foot waterfall.  It was nice hiking in cooler temperatures.  Despite the crappy DOC camp facilities, the trail systems were well maintained and pleasant to walk through. 

In the early afternoon we loaded up the vans and headed further south, aiming for Mount Maunganui.  We reached the holiday park at dusk and pulled in, excited to shower and use a real bathroom again.  

 Ryan - old mine shaft

All smiles

Crossing another bridge

Wentworth falls, definitely "worth" it, can you see JV's red shirt in the far upper left (very faint)

The crew hiked to the top of the falls

Laua'e ferns

 Fern forests (similar to Haupu'u)

NZ Day 24


May 29
Day – Surf Hot Water Beach morning, drive south
Night – Wentworth DOC camp (old gold mining town)

The swell had really subsided this morning.  Hoping to continue the magic, we hopped in for a couple hour morning session.  Still fun, despite the drop in waves.  After drying off our bodies and wetsuits we continued on to a DOC camp a little further down the road in Wentworth.  The area was home to an old goldrush mining town with numerous abandoned mines throughout the mountains.  No one was around when we pulled in, with the exception of an attack duck.  Being chased by a one foot tall bird is pretty demeaning.  It took everything in me not to punt it across the forest floor.  The campsite was by far the worst DOC site we have experienced.  Most of the facilities didn’t work, and the composting toilets had a crossbar across the hole creating a perfect ledge for “hangers”.  I had a bit of a standoff with the manager that night, after I refused to pay for one person.  We ended up working things out.  Limited pics this day....

 On our way out of Hot Water Beach

Saturday, June 18, 2011

NZ Day 23


May 28
Day – Surf Hot Water Beach twice, hot springs at night
Night – Hot water beach parking lot

What can we say here....woke up early to perfect head high barrels.  Surfed all day (ate and used the bathroom too).  More barrels on this single day than my entire time in indo.  Met a cool cat our age from Oregon who was camping in the parking lot in his van with his girlfriend.  His girlfriend's parents came over to NZ and rented a camper for a month to travel with them, and were staying in the parking lot as well.  That night we all walked down the beach at low tide to dig for the thermal spring water.  There was about a dozen others down there already.  Approximately 8-12" below the sand, boiling fresh water bubbles to the surface.  It is possible to dig a large pool and lay in it like a private ocean front spa.  Good day, good times!

Friends splitting peaks

Empty lineups

End section top turn

Bottom Turn

Rollin

 
We love this place

U'i kept me well fed (homemade fried rice, topped with homemade chilli, 3 eggs, and 1 avocado)

Between-sesh down time

JV warming up

Midnight jacuzzi session