Tag Archives: Rotorua

Me, you and the Paritutu

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Views of Paritutu from Back Beach

The Paritutu is a mini mountain, well hill really, overlooking New Plymouth and some of the Taranaki region of New Zealand. My plan had been to climb Mount Taranaki itself but other than a peek of the peak on my arrival into the city, she had kept herself well hidden under a swath of heavy cloud. The weather had also been particularly bad for New Zealand summertime: torrential downpours and forceful winds that snapped trees in two and forced us humans to retreat indoors.

But then one morning a little sliver of sunshine promised a better day and my friends suggested a practise walk to and up the Paritutu. We dropped Rob and his surfboard off at Back Beach, and Dund and I set off along the cliff top walk through passageways of plants and grasses. The views opened up to show the surf below; nice lines and peeling two foot waves on a bright blue ocean under a Simpsons sky.

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Back Beach

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The walk from Back Beach to Paritutu

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Approaching the Paritutu rock

After less than half an hour we were at the start of the Paritutu climb where the first part was an easy ascent up solid, supported steps. The next section was more fun: a return to the ropes and cables of some of the climbs I had experienced in Peru, although here the chain was really necessary to help launch you up to the next level. Not really a path, it was a steep scramble with rocks jutting out all over the place that put vertigo and basic climbing skills to the test. I loved it. (Coming down was a bit of a different matter, the incline and height accentuated by the views down to the bottom, and Dund’s legs were shaking when we arrived back at the start, an adrenaline-achievement mix).

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Dund starting the climb up Paritutu

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Steep climb further up the Paritutu

At the top of Paritutu there was a little platform to catch one’s breath, take in the views and reapply some sun cream. No shade though, and the strong midday sun was a bit vicious. The height of the Paritutu, although only 156m, allows you to take in the views of the city, seascape and the mass of fields stretching out into the distance. And if you’re lucky, Mount Taranaki, but on this particular day she was still feeling a bit shy. Not uncommon, apparently.

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Me and Dund at the top of the Paritutu

When I was in Rotorua, I listened to a radio interview with the  British adventurer Alastair Humphries who talked about doing mini adventures that were doable in a day. This Paritutu experience was essentially a micro adventure, and although fairly structured and safe, it still had the undertaking of the clamber up steep crags which gave it an element of risk. It wasn’t for the unfit or the frightened (though the girl who point blank refused to go up when her parents were up for it was probably being a bit pathetic), but it is a short and sweet morning activity.

If the rain holds off, give it a go.

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Walking the Whakarewarewa Forest

I wanted to know what there was to do in Rotorua, New Zealand that was accessible by foot and public transport, and something that was cheap, or even better, free. A helicopter ride over to the White Island was out of my budget, I couldn’t get out to the Rainbow Mountain and its spectacular crater lakes and I didn’t fancy going to the Polynesian Spa alone (although I did hear that after you’ve paid the $22 entry you can stay in all day and leave a wrinkled prune).

And then my CouchSurf host told me about the Whakarewarewa Forest. I love forests: the smell, the calm and the twitter of birds. I was sold.

Taking the bus out of Rotorua to Long Mile Road, the driver pointed me in the direction of the Redwoods Visitor Centre, a further kilometre down a tree lined avenue where I felt so small next to these tall, grand trees.

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Entry to Redwoods and the Whakarewarewa Forest

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Avenue down to the Redwoods Visitor Centre

The forest is set up with a number of clear routes laid out for mountain bikers and walkers. I had decided on the Pohaturoa track after doing a bit of reading up on the trail: a 2 hour hike through a varied landscape that would give me views down over the city and the possibility of seeing the Pohutu Geyser in action.

The first ten minutes took me into the redwood forest along a dirt pathway and on towards more boggy stretches, across wooden walkways and by crystal clear pools.

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Into the woods

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Jungle walkways

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Crystal clear pools

For a short while I joined a tarmacked road on the outskirts of the forest, sharing the space with mountain bikers and dog walkers. I stopped one woman. ‘What’s the emergency number in New Zealand?’ I asked, realising suddenly that if I got stuck at any point I had no clue of who to contact. ‘111’, she told me, ‘but you’ll be fine, there are a few people out today’.

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Easy signposting (most of the way)

The next section took me back into the forest for half an hour up a mud track where there was sparser planting of trees and ferns. A final little climb and I arrived at the Upper Lookout, a red, gravelly area with wide-reaching views. I stopped for a picnic in a cooling breeze, and took in the scenery spread out below me: gaps in the thick covering of bushy trees out of which thick, white puffs of steam rose up into a dull sky and drifted off into nothing; the main road leading down towards the lake with a steady trickle of traffic both ways; a little mountain and the White Island out on Lake Rotorua, both covered in a heavy blanket of foliage; and the city itself, a spacious place full of parks and fields and greenery.

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Taking a break

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Views down over Rotorua

I had been walking for nearly two hours and was starting to descend along wider mud tracks with pretty scatterings of flowers when the path literally dropped off into a mass of water. Dead end. I looked for another option and found a second pathway, a wooden walkway, but again it was sunken way below water level.

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Scrambling over fallen trees

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Flowers along the way

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Dead end. Great.

I didn’t want to back track the entire route so I decided to do a bit of off-road scrambling up muddy banks and through overgrowth and clusters of trees until I finally hit a mountain bike track. Signs clearly stated: no walkers. Well tough. What else was I meant to do?

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Definitely no walkers... but this is where I came from...

Having already walked so far, the end of the trail would surely be imminent, right? But no, it took a further hour before I arrived back at the Redwoods Visitor Centre, and back to the bus stop on Long Mile Road. Mini adventure completed.

Buses run each way every half an hour. The No. 3 bus leaves from Pukuatua Street and is the bus headed for Owhata. Tickets cost $2.40 each way. The Whakarewarewa Forest has walks that last from one hour to a full day, and dedicated mountain bike trails for all levels of ability.

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Can I stomach the stench of Rotorua?

How do you choose where to go when travelling? Interests, hobbies, archaeological and geographical wonders? As I’m travelling through New Zealand without a guide-book, I’ve been relying on local information and recommendations. So far it’s worked out well. Going to Rotorua was not a decision based to the volcanic activity of White Island or for the alleged health benefits of the many naturally heated spas and baths of the area; it was simply recommended as  a nice stop off on my way down to visit friends in New Plymouth. But I was warned: it was a stinky place, sulphur fumes from hot muddy pools perfuming the air.

I arrived into Rotorua in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand late afternoon. It had been a drizzly journey down from Auckland through rich, green countryside; acres of flat farmland and forests with rolling hills in the far distance.

The bus skirted the industrial outskirts of the city. I was surprised at the size of the place: I had expected a quaint, little place yet here were all the usual city trappings of McDonalds and Subway and KFC. I held back judgement. Thick white puffs rose into the damp sky and the little kid in front of me exclaimed: ‘Look mummy! Steam!’ My ex’s voice rang loud in my ears: ‘It’s not steam, you can’t see steam!but I bit my tongue. No need to say a thing.

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Little white wisps of.. steam!

It was only a five-minute walk from the bus stop to my CouchSurf where I dropped down my bags and got ready to do some exploring. My host, Susanne, pointed me in the direction of the waterfront, a ten minute stroll from the city centre through the museum gardens full of flowers and statues and clipped lawns, and alongside the stinking heat and scalding temperatures of the Whangapipiro pool (also known as Rachel’s Pool after ‘Madam Rachel, a notorious English cosmetician who promised youthful complexions because of the softening effect of silica water on the skin).

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Rotorua Museum - is entry really more expensive than the Louvre, Paris?

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Whangapipiro or Rachel Pool - scorching hot

The lakefront itself was a bit wild, wet and windy, but a few people were out and about and ignoring requests not to feed the birds. Black swans paddled around in the water that lapped in over the pavement, and sea planes lifted off of the greyness of Lake Rotorua.

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Black swan at Rotorua lakefront

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Don't feed the birds! Rotorua lakefront

The following day brought with it the promise of better weather so I stepped into my walking shoes and jumped on the No. 3 bus to Long Mile Road and the impressive forest of redwood trees. The afternoon was spent exploring more of Rotorua itself.

Rotorua, with its population of about 70,000 is a small city. The streets feel spacious and shrubbery is dotted around all over the place. Crossing a road isn’t a problem at all, big gaps in the gentle flow of traffic. Rotorua has been voted New Zealand’s most beautiful city on six occasions, and if you are able to ignore the sulphuric smell and taste of many a breath that you take, then yes, it’s a lovely, lovely place.

I went and had a chat with Pa outside the Rotorua Arts Village (RAVE) where he was carving bone combs and other decorative trinkets. ‘I can’t afford whale bone’, he laughed when I asked him what bone he was working with, ‘This is just beef bone’. He told me about the Treaty of Waitangi and the British-New Zealand connection, and the ongoing fight to have the treaty declarations honoured. And he recommended Te Hira Toi – Ta Moko Studio when I asked him about Maori tattooing. ‘They’re family. Tell them I sent you’.

In the centre, the main street of Tutanekai Street is crowded with souvenir shops, cafés, clothing shops and a bundle of traditional craft places. ‘Quite a few shops have moved into the new mall’, said Susanne, but it didn’t feel too dire, – there still seemed to be life on the streets and a welcome absence of boarded up buildings.

Outside the info and events hub of City Focus under the rain/sun protection of a stylised covering, handfuls of young people sit tapping on laptops and smart phones making use of a free Wi-Fi hotspot, courtesy of KapuaNET. Music plays between 8:00am and 5:00pm and one day I found myself listening to lovesick slush and being serenaded by a high (on life?) guy when everyone else was having their breakfasts. You can’t pick your playlist and it was a slightly sickly way to start the day, but free WiFi to allow me to check in with people back home? I’m not going to complain. I can deal with some schmaltz and crazy characters.

Cafés with outdoor seating are scattered around the city centre. There seems to be a lot of independent places, non-chain, but it doesn’t always ensure quality service. I walked away from the prospect of a lazy afternoon coffee when after more than ten minutes I still hadn’t been served, despite  the café being pretty empty (I have since found out that it is in fact a self-service place! – but why then did the group who came in after me get served with a flourish almost immediately?).

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No entry to the hot pools, Kuirua Park, Raglan

Another afternoon I spent wandering the Kuirau Park, joining families and couples as they walked by steaming cauldrons of hot bubbling water and on to the cooler, bearable foot pools where people sat chatting and dipping their toes in the warm water. The surrounding air hung thick with the smell of sulphur and I tried to imagine actually being resident in this city. ‘I don’t notice it anymore’, said Susanne when I asked her about living with these constant fumes. For me, a newbie, it wasn’t so easy: there was the odd moment where I was distracted or forgot, but then a sudden waft would hit me and I would involuntarily scrunch up my face. I wonder what the effect is on people’s health?

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Hot springs in the Kuirua Park

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Kuira Park, Raglan

The park, on the whole, is much like other parks with benches and colour coordinated flower plantings and rich grassiness perfect for lounging in the shade of a tree. Birds hop around and ducks patter about on the little lake, and the air is filled with song: chirping, crowing and the harsh, raspy interruption of gulls. There is a background baseline hum of after work traffic, and drifting over from the other side of the park is the sound of a guitar and a man singing. A perfect day when the rain has taken rest and the sun forcefully kisses one with some of its vitamin D magic.

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Kuirua Park, Raglan

My time in Rotorua concluded with a trip down Eat Streat (yes, Eat Streat and not Eat Street) at the far end of Tutanekai Street where I ate a delicious Greek pizza in Café Ephesus with my CouchSurf host, chatted about life, love and travels and enjoyed a chilled bottle of white New Zealand wine. And for a moment, again, I forgot about the smell.

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