Six Lakes Trip
The Six Lakes trip is in the nature of a luxury trip — Tikitere excepted. 1 Leaving Rotorua, the road follows the eastern shore of Rotorua Lake 1 and commands fine iews of the lake and Mokoia Island. The country to the right marks the scene of early ' native missionary enterprise, and here the first English missionaries were successful in planting hedgerows and wooded areas in true Eng- ! lish landseape style. The route is in part typically English and merges ' into the weirdest and most dangerous locality in the whole of the thermal regions, for nowhere else in the world is there such an intense concenfcration of heat as found at Tikitere. The hardest rock is reduced to a violently agitated molten mass, ' impregnated with acids, and casting off a variety of noxious fumes. No J effort is required to picture the inferno that lies not far beneath the ' surface, and that finds escape in the ' form of blinding steam, issuing through treacherous, seething depths of mud. At Tikitere a guide is compulsory; the tourist is escorted through the labyrinth bearing such names as Hell's Gate, the Devil's Porridge Pot, Sodom and Gomorrah, ' the Devil's Rocking Chair, etc. Without a guide, Tikitere is dangerous. Passing Tikitere, Lake Rotoiti eomes within view. The mar/y wooded indentations of this fa^ourite lake, the background of bush, sheer eliffs, sequestered bays and inlets, delightful beaches, form a superb picture of natural beauty. Its shores are dotted with ancienc Maori settlements and said to contain specimens of native carvings, the most faultless of their kind. Leaving Rotoiti, the car enters the famous Hongl's Track, along which the formidable warrior frequently passed and where still flourish the Sacred and the Hangman's Tree; the haunts of spirits whose goodwill and protection are sought to this day by Maoris passing along the track, and propitiatory offerings in the shape of wreaths and green leaves are still placed at the base of the trees. Lakes Rotoehu and Rotoma embrace scenery into which every element of beauty enters; and by the roadside betweeh the lakes, the wonderful soda, magnesia, and iron spring is visited. The spring, sparkling and clear as crystal, is of unique curative value. Here the naturalist is in his element ; the lakes ■ and the dense bush surrounding them serve as a sanctuary for birds that j elsewhere are becoming rare. The j bittern is freuently to be seen and the note of the kiwi heard. The road branching off to Lake Okataina leads for n early five miles through magnifieent native bush. Here the t glories of New Zea'.and's primeval ' forest and clustered fern, the habitat j of the bell bird, the tui, and others whose notes attain extraordinary pur- ' ity, are seen to perfection, and in an environment that for centuries has remained unchanged. Okataina | Lake has played a classical part in j the l'ife of the early natives. Hidden among superb bush-covered hills, canoes moved freely across its waters to mysterious pahs and secret burial places long before the appearance ( of the white man; and traces of by- j gone history in the form of derelict ' pahs and burial places are still to , be seen. Lake Rotokawau fills the ' crater of a volcano that became ex- I tinct ages ago. The lake has inec- 1 cessible, precipitous sides and lies like a gem in an amphitheatre of bush. Fish, ltnowing no fear of the ' enemy, swarm in its quiet, unfath- ' omable waters.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 339, 28 September 1932, Page 8
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579Six Lakes Trip Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 339, 28 September 1932, Page 8
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