The Waitomo Caves

I remember when I was young, we had glow in the dark stars stuck to the ceiling to mimick the night sky. Simply a bit of phosphorescence, and I was transported to another realm. This was the same feeling that struck me as I looked up in a cave and saw… stars. Except they were actually bioluminescent bugs.

The Glow Worm caves are a big attraction here, and though we have explored caves before, we felt this was one spot we couldn’t miss.


The cave tour started at a synthetic cave entrance. A funny thing, really: they tried to make the cement look like sandstone.
We entered the ground through a giant sliding metal door. The temperature started to drop. In the darkness, yellow and white lights appeared in a giant spiral.

The beginning of the tour talked about cave formations as we went deeper into the Earth. Stalactites, stalagmites, cave curtains, you know the drill. Along the sides of the walkway, there were sensors that beeped aggressively when you got too close to the formations. Our guide joked that ninjas would drop down from the ceiling if it happened more than three times. Honestly, I wasn’t paying too much attention to the beginning. Before long, we arrived at what I really wanted to see.


The cave opened into a chamber, and above us there were bright teal stars. Of course, it wasn’t the night sky we were seeing but glow worms. They are very difficult to photograph without fancy equipment. They  are way, way brighter than this, and there are far more of them. If you’re curious, I highly recommend looking up better photos online. They are truly incredible.

We learned that glow worms are actually glow maggots. They are usually above running water in caves because they feed off of insects. The insects fly up to their bioluminescent light and get caught in their dangling strings.


These strings are made of mostly mucus. Gross. The mystique of glow worms was destroyed a little, but I am still fascinated by their strange glowing lives. I could have spent hours in that room. However, the tour continued. The next big room we went into was dubbed simply “the pretty room.”


So many cool formations!


My favorite was seeing the reflections in the pool. Yes, there’s a pool there.


The cave we were in, Ruakuri, was named as such from a Maori story. It translates to the cave of two dogs. There is a part of the cave that is sacred: it is a burial site. Tours do not go in that area any more. The cave itself was privately owned for years before being seized by the government. Eventually it was restored to the original owner who much later agreed to private tours if they took care of the cave and kept everything in good condition. He had put up this sign to ward off the curious, and it still stands.


One of the last walkways we went through was lit in blue.


It was named the Ghostwalk. Apparently some spooky ‘incidents’ happened down here.

Eventually we returned to the bright light of day and had a late lunch at a local cafe.

*****Written by Checkers*****

Hot Stuff! December 27, 2016

Volcanic rock is everywhere on the North Island. It is strange to read the geology books we brought, where all the dates are thousands, not millions of years. The features are complex, caulderas (*huge explosive volcanoes) on top of lava flows, and cones of pumice. Hydrothermal areas are common. Did you know New Zealand has a lot of geothermal power plants?

After the Maori experience at Whakarewarewa, we walked around their thermal area, seeing how the villagers learned the tourist trade early (1860’s), sharing their thermal springs with the European visitors. Smart!

Tubs at different temperatures for different purposes.
The thermal areas in the Taupo rift are often privately, or tribally owned. Although they feel a lot like Yellowstone, with thermal springs, geysers with beautiful pools, and gurgling mud pots, each area is managed by a different group.


That afternoon, we went to the Craters of the Moon – because of the park of the same name in Idaho is one of our favorites – and found out how different the moon is on the other side of the Earth!

Look at all the water, the plants! In Idaho, the park with this name is black basalt flows and lava tubes, desolate.

Great colors in the hydrothermal fields, too


And a fairly easy walk for us travelers.

We got back to our resort in the town of Taupo, on Lake Taupo, which is a big crater formed by a cauldera, surrounded by volcanoes, and took pictures of the water fowl:

See the ducklings? They are almost pure black – far darker than ducklings in Colorado!


And we don’t get black swans in Colorado, either!


This is Ruapehu – used in filming the Lord of the Rings as a stand-in for Mt. Doom, the close up shots of the hobbits climbing up to destroy the Ring, as seen from our window of the hotel!

******written by Clare******

Learning about the Maori

The Maori culture and its history are a huge part of New Zealand. Many names of towns, signs, and other information can be found in the language, which has been one of the official languages of NZ since 1987. Of course, the relationship between the Maori people and the colonizing Europeans has not always been great, but it does seems like overall the two cultures try to understand one another in earnest. The Maori culture developed over time from Polynesian settlers arriving on the islands sometime between 1250 and 1300 CE. European settlers did not arrive until the mid 1800s.

We wanted to learn more about the Maori culture, especially since it was where the art of poi originated. Being outsiders, it is difficult to reach into another culture without coloring it with our own bias. We attended a tourist attraction called The Living Maori Village knowing full well that it could be just as exploitative as some of its counterparts in America. However, we were pleasantly surprised. The set up may have been a bit cheesy for the performance, but the performers all clearly loved what they did. All we can hope is that through sharing their culture, they can educate others without watering it down.

We saw traditional dances, a love song, a fierce Hakka, and poi and stick dances. The performances were all incredible, and we took few photos, preferring to soak it all in.


Short poi were used solely for contact, to beat out different rhythms. Long poi were used in movements more recognizable to modern flow art, and were evocative of specific animals and other natural or spiritual phenomena. Both poi and stick were arts of training, and improved dexterity and coordination as well as being beautiful to watch.

The village itself displayed mostly post-European arcitecture, although Maori carvings often adorned the buildings. The best carvings were reserved for the Ancestral Meeting House, where they told a story of a tribe’s history.


The Maori used the resources around them. This tribe developed around a geothermal hotspot. The heat from the pools was used to cook food, as well as for bathing and washing. The entire village seemed to fill with steam as we wandered about.


There were also some geysers.


We took a short hike.


When we left the village, I took one last look at the entrance. The arch is a war memorial.

 

Hobbiton Across the Water

We left the Orchard House to take a much-anticipated adventure. And no, we didn’t need to run out of the house with a signed contract in hand. We had a quick lunch at Shire’s Rest to begin our journey.


Hobbiton, in its original form, was the set for first Lord of the Rings and then the Hobbit trilogy. However, nearly all of the set was reconstructed just for the tourist sensation. Can you guess which of the trees in this photo is complete fake? They even took down the leaves and repainted them so they looked as realistic as possible during the film.


There are forty four hobbit holes in Hobbiton. It is really, really difficult to choose which pictures to post. Some of them are very small, to give the illusion of someone like Gandalf being unusually our of proportion in the Shire. Others are “to-scale” to us, so that they seem like realistic proportions to the hobbits.


Not only is the set much larger than any of us expected, but the attention to detail was astonishing. The chimneys of the hobbit holes smoked like the hobbits were home, there was a fishing hole near the Green Dragon Inn with plastic fishes, and well, Bag End had the perfect addition to its entrance gate.


The walk through of Hobbiton took over an hour, through the meandering paths of the village, and over the gathering place where Bilbo gave his eleventy-one birthday speech under the Party Tree. The final culminating moment was a nice cold ale at the Green Dragon Inn, rebuilt after the first set was literally burned down to film the scene that Frodo sees in the Mirror of Galadriel of the Shire burning. Yes, Peter Jackson burned down a perfectly good pub for his attention to detail. Don’t worry, the only brew for the brave and true, is still from the rebuilt Green Dragon.


Our travels were not even over yet, for we had another two more hours to drive to Lake Taupo, our next lodgings. Lake Taupo would be our next headquarters for a few days to do some of the more touristy jaunts we have planned. It is a picturesque resort town next to a very large lake in an ancient volcanic caldera. Tired from the day’s journey, the hobbits had a much needed relaxing evening.

*****Written by Checkers and Laura*****