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December 13, 2012 | in Australia & New Zealand, Travel

Miranda in Wonderland… or Rotorua, New Zealand

New Zealand mushroom

You can smell Rotorua, a lovely town tucked into the northwest corner of New Zealand’s North Island, long before you can see it.  Rotorua is best-known for two things: its crown as the adventure sports capital of New Zealand and its extensive network of hot springs… hence the looming, sulfur stench.

Day #10,288: Mr. M & I had our frosty morning sights set on the Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland.  I debated whether or not to be super-excited about a place deemed ‘wonderland’ or super-scared that ‘wonderland’ secretly meant ‘tourist-ravaged.’  Because it was the dead of winter, we ended up with the whole of the Hot Springs to ourselves.

Wai-O-Tapu Geothermal Wonderland
Wandering ghostly Wai-O-Tapu in the early morning mists.  Traveling off-season is the way to go!

Wai-O-Tapu, the self-proclaimed Wonderland, consists of a geothermal area accessed by a network of trails, NZ’s largest bubbling mud pool (it gives me peculiar pleasure that someone has done the stats on this), and the Lady Knox Geyser, which erupts every day at precisely 10:15am.  We decided to do the full 3km walk around the hot springs for a bit of an overview.

Wai-O-Tapu Geothermal Wonderland
Best to bring good sneakers… the full trail walk will take an hour or so and meanders up and down the hills.

The landscape was otherworldly… barren and raw, but encircled by the dense New Zealand greenery.  Different deposits in the landscape create crazy colored hot spring waters that only add to that sense of the ethereal.

Champagne Pool Wai-O-Tapu
The famous champagne pool bubbles with escaping carbon dioxide. This gorgeous orange color is courtesy of arsenic deposits in the rock.
Devil's Bath Wai-O-Tapu
This bright green pool known as “Devil’s Bath” is colored by suspended sulphur and smells as though Devil don’t bathe as often as he should.

Mr. M & I especially enjoyed the fact that many of these steaming, snarling springs are named ‘Devil’s’ this or that.  Every picture that I took of Mr. M at Wai-O-Tapu has him hissing and making devil horns.  This never got old because we’re both 13-yr old boys at heart.

Wai-O-Tapu Geothermal Wonderland
Where the devil comes to dip his nib.

We took a small detour to the famed mud pool, which looked and sounded exactly like The Bog of Eternal Stench from the movie “Labyrinth.”  Please someone tell me that I’m not the only one who loved this creepy Jim Henson movie as a child.  David Bowie prancing around in a rockstar mullet with his posse of muppet goblins seriously made me contemplate becoming David Bowie when I grew up.  (For the record, this option is still on the table.)

Don't judge me. Everything about David Bowie dancing with muppets is amazing.  And yes- that is a baby in the background... the movie's pretty triply.
Don’t judge me.  Everything about David Bowie dancing with muppets is amazing.
Mud Pool Rotorua
The bubbling mud pit of eternal stench comes to life in Rotorua.

Getting to hike the trails of Wai-O-Tapu all by our lonesome was like exploring a beautiful fairytale land… except for the fact that the steamy, dreamy landscape caused my ugly-stepsister hair to frizz up to three times its normal size.

New Zealand mushroom
Even the mushrooms look straight out of a storybook! I’m sure that a family of gnomes calls this toadstool home.
Rotorua NZ
Another beautiful little fungus living out its days in Wai-O-Tapu.

We made it to the Lady Knox Geyser with a few minutes to spare.  Truth be told, Lady Knox has a little help reaching lift-off precisely at 10:15am every morning.

Lady Knox Geyser
She’s a-gettin’ ready…

The staff empties a packet of soap into the geyser chamber, which acts as a surfactant to allow mixing for of hot and cold water and ba-daaa (cue the trumpet fanfare)… Geyser Viagra.

Lady Knox Geyser
Thar she blows!

Lady Knox was quite impressive, but she couldn’t compete with the rest of the Wonderland- which, we decided, more than earned its name.  Seeing as how we’d investigated Rotorua’s title as geothermal capital, we thought it only fair to explore its equally well-known adventure sports.

We decided to hit up the Skyline Rotorua Luge, a winding downhill go-kart that the locals take Very Seriously.  Waiting for our first ride down, Mr. M & I were honest-to-God in line behind a Kiwi who’d just knocked a tooth out five minutes earlier after being bumper-luged by his own mother and who subsequently flipped out of his cart and rolled halfway down the hill.

Skyline Luge Rotorua
The view of Rotorua from the top of the luge was beautiful! It almost made me stop thinking about the heretofore unconsidered dangers of adventure sporting.

Despite being a big proponent of going ‘balls-out’ in life, mama ain’t losin’ a tooth in the name of Luge.  I never even made it past the beginner’s course!  It was such a bumpy-crazy ride that I could barely hold onto the brake lever and almost ran myself off the course.

It may not look that crazy, but you just don't know, you weren't there.  It.  WAS.
It may not look that wild, but you just don’t know, you weren’t there. It. WAS.

At the end of our second ride down, Mr. M made a bummer of a discovery: the video camera he’d had stuffed in his jacket pocket had bounced out unnoticed somewhere along the course.  We searched everywhere for it (including tramping through all the landscaping), but I think an opportunist ran off with all our unbacked-up memories from the past two weeks spent in Australia.  Blarg.

We stopped for hot cocoa to cheer ourselves up because everyone knows there are some bad moods only cocoa can cure.  Then, on our way back to the motel, we saw this:

Zorb Rotorua
Not sure what it is? See those balls up at the top of the hill?….
Zorb Rotorua
… It’s zorbing! Or rolling down a hill stuffed into a human hamster ball. Invented here in Rotorua.

We didn’t end up zorbing that day (a tummy full of cocoa + rolling down a hill head-over-heel sounds like a recipe for very bad things), but I did get around to it a few months later and can report It Was Awesome.  And most importantly, Mr. M & I resolved to end the day on a happy note.

Just before sunset, we headed over to Polynesian Spa, natural hot springs overlooking the Rotorua Lake.

Polynesian Spa Rotorua
Not us or my pic. After the loss of our video camera (may he rest in peace), I decided to safeguard my camera for the rest of the night. But you get the idea!

For $20, you can sit & relax in one of the many naturally heated pools and watch the lakeside lights flicker on in the distance.  It’s a slice of enchantment.

Rotorua is something of a wonderland, shrouded in its perpetual layer of volcanic steam.  Even the cobwebs feel a little magical.

cobweb

Yeah, we lost all our vacay videos- but every wonderland has a troll or two.

In the end, the day was all about living happily ever after.

Wai-O-Tapu Geothermal Wonderland

Details of the Day:

Accommodations: We loooved the Silver Fern Motel in Rotorua.  The staff is friendly, the wifi is free, and every room has a mini-kitchen and in-room Jacuzzi tub that somehow manages to feel luxurious and not icky-honeymoon-suite-in-Reno, if you know what I mean.

Wai-O-Tapu Thermal Wonderland: Showing up early seems to be the way to go!  Several busloads of schoolkids and tourists showed up around 10am to watch the geyser and then tour the springs, but luckily- we were already done!  Like most naturally gorgeous places, Wai-O-Tapu might lose some of its magic when experienced with hoards of other people.

**A side note if you have hopes of heading to New York City anytime in the near or distant future…  Unanchor is running a promotion on itineraries, and my  First-Timer’s 2-Day Walking Tour and 1-Day Lower East Side Tour can be downloaded to your kindle for FREE!  Yay, we love free stuff!!  My only request is that you leave me a review on Amazon tellin’ me what you think.  Get your download on now cuz the promotion only lasts till 11:59pm PST Friday, Dec 14th.  

Thanks, readers!!  See you in New York!**

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Tags: balls out landscape nature New Zealand photography Rotorua
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Comments

  1. pamasaurus December 13, 2012 Reply

    Oh, WOW! That's some crazy stuff!! I've always wanted to go zorbing. One day I shall.

    • msdulce December 15, 2012 Reply

      You shall! Look what I found hiding in Roundtop Mountain, PA! It's not "officially" zorbing, but the OGO ball looks exactly the same: http://www.skiroundtop.com/mt-adventures I smell a 30th birthday adventure... :)

      • pamasaurus December 15, 2012 Reply

        OMG! I'm so excited right now!! I'll have to do more research and cross my fingers that the weather is awesome in March ;) Or, I guess a belated 30th birthday adventure will be had in the summer, haha. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction!

  2. Pingback: Duggars and Dolly in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee « Spend Your Days

    […] first became aware of this spectacle while in Rotorua, New Zealand, when we saw giant plastic balls bouncing down a big hill and had to pull over for a closer […]

    Reply
  3. Rejoice For The Day December 15, 2012 Reply

    Those pools look amazing! New Zealand is on our travel wish list, but I am just not too crazy about how long it takes to get there. If and when we do go, this place is definitely on the itinerary!

    • msdulce December 15, 2012 Reply

      Oh my goodness, I hear you on the long flight. My poor liver metabolized a LOT of airplane sedatives on that 17+hr trip out there! It was- amazingly, considering how much I hate flying- totally worth the trip. More natural beauty than we were able to stuff into a week!

  4. LaVagabonde December 15, 2013 Reply

    You ain't kidding about the Rotorua stench, My husband and I soaked for too long in some mud pools and then I washed our bathing suits with our regular clothes. All of our clothes smelled like the bowels of Hell for days!

    • Miranda December 16, 2013 Reply

      How is that stench so pervasive? It's the souvenir that won't stop giving! Hopefully you two had an otherwise amazing time in Rotorua. Thanks for stopping by!

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