I flew into Auckland weary and grimy, after a ridiculous three flights from Australia, and tottered around the airport, practising maintaining a precarious balance between the towering backpack on my back, and the equally formidable ‘day’ pack resting conveniently on my well-fed tummy. A few immediate observations, a sign of things to come – the chirpy stewardess announcing, “Welcome to Eeh Newww Zeelund (
Air New Zealand)”, the chirpier sign at Auckland airport announcing free coffee for all arriving passengers, an amazingly efficient
Vodafone counter at the airport, the
lime-green, bug-like minibus that whisked me off to the central bus station where I was to meet an old friend and head to Rotorua, four hours away. The jigsaw, all falling into place.
Rotorua is clearly a slightly insane town. And one that’s on fire, permanently. Mama Nature appears to be having one helluva fat chuckle with this Maori hotbed. How else do you explain walking down a street in the midst of sulphurous steam that spews all around you, from gutters, wells, pits (both natural and man-made), ponds, brooks, and from the very ground you walk on?
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It was a world like nothing I’d ever seen before, awake or in dreams. One breath of clarity, the next obscured by the thickest thermal fog. Spines of long-dead trees, vitriolic blue ponds, bubbling mud, and heat, wet heat in every direction. Visions of angels, demons, and wraiths sprang to mind, and the dazzling scene before our eyes enmeshed with the urgent, pressing odour diffused everywhere. Sensory overload. Unspeakably fantastic.
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And finally, two things that cannot possibly miss mention –
Treks Backpackers, and
Fat Dog Café in Rotorua. The former is a spanking new backpackers that’s so cheap and so clean, you’ll spend hours fighting the urge to scan every corner with a fine-toothed comb for bugs or snakes or kiwis or something. Regardless to say, all we discovered were immaculate carpets, fluffy beds (yes, beds, not bunks! In a dorm!), fancy swipe-cards for keys, and very, very pleasant dreams. As for the café, a special mention in the Lonely Planet describing bright, quirky dog-prints painted all over the walls, and chunky all-day breakfasts drew us there like moths to a flame. Two fat breakfasts on, one of gloriously obese blueberry pancakes, and the other of the traditional sausage, eggs and toast deal, we moved on, along our separate ways. My well-fed tummy now reinforced, I turned south and hopped onto a plane headed to Queenstown, where the rest of the magic was set to unfold.
2 comments:
This great aunt of mine had done a similar road trip in NZ (yes, my jaw had dropped) long ago and she described Rotorua to be like a hot, furiously steaming idli!:)) Now i see why.
ohh. saw any kiwis? pics? why am i writing this when i will see you in a few hours?:D :D
A road trippin' great aunt?! Wow, your family is super-cool! :D
And yes, very idli-like it was. Hehh..
No kiwis, other than the one in souvenir shops, but I'll tell you more in a few hours. Yay!!
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