Main Currency
Currency: New Zealand Dollar (NZD)
Symbol: NZ$
Rotorua is the most popular and, inevitably, the most commercialised tourist destination on the North Island. It has the most energetic thermal activity in the country, with bubbling mud pools, gurgling hot springs, and gushing geysers. It's also a great place to catch traditional Maori ceremonies.
The Rotorua district was first settled in the 14th century when the canoe Te Arawa, captained by Tamatekapua, arrived from Hawaiki at Maketu in the central Bay of Plenty. The settlers took the tribal name Te Arawa to commemorate the vessel that had safely brought them so far. Much of the inland forest was explored by Tamatekapua's grandson, Ihenga, who also named many geographical features of the area. The name Rotorua means 'The Second Lake' (roto means 'lake' and rua 'two'), as it was the second lake that Ihenga discovered.
In the next few hundred years, various subtribes spread through the area and, as they grew in number, split into more subtribes and conflicts broke out over territory. In 1823 the Arawa lands were invaded by Northland's Ngapuhi chief, Hongi Hika, in the so-called Musket Wars. Both the Arawa and the Northlanders suffered heavy losses and the Ngapuhi eventually withdrew. During the Waikato Land War (1863-67), the Arawa tribe threw in their lot with the government against their traditional enemies in the Waikato, gaining the backing of its troops and preventing East Coast reinforcements getting through to support the Maori King Movement.
With peace returning in the early 1870s, European settlement around Rotorua really took off. The army and government personnel involved in the war helped broadcast the scenic wonders of the place. People came to take the waters in the hope of cures for all sorts of diseases, and Rotorua's tourist industry was thus founded. The town's main attraction was the fabulous Pink and White Terraces, formed by the sinter deposits of silica from volcanic activity. Touted at the time as the eighth natural wonder of the world, they were destroyed in the 1886 Mt Tarawera eruption.
The early part of the 20th century set the cogs of tourism in motion with the creation of the Bath House, an investment designed to tempt wealthy northern hemisphere patrons to the 'Great South Seas Spa'. The city's population greatly increased thanks to tourism and the burgeoning industries of agriculture, forestry and manufacturing.
Rotorua was home to Jean Batten, a pilot who set many record flights, among them becoming the first woman to fly solo from England to Australia and back in 1935.
Having been judged New Zealand's most beautiful city in 1999, 2000 and 2002, Rotorua today is thriving, buoyed by the huge influx of tourists. The new millennium has seen the city blossom with strong improvements in facilities and attractions thanks to the rocketing tourist dollar.
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Tamaki Maori Village
City Centre
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Rotorua Museum of Art & History
City Centre
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By Sarah Bennett
An early morning walk along the water's edge is a chance to breathe some of Rotorua's famous eggy air deep into my lungs and enjoy the tranquillity before the throng of fellow tourists wakes up and floods the lake. Breakfast is at Lime, on a leafy corner overlooking the lake park, one of the town's many excellent cafes serving great coffee as standard. Replete, it's up to Whakarewarea Thermal Village where the locals show me around their incredible bubbling mud pools, steamy vents and the only genuine thermal hangi in town from which emerges a buttery corncob, quickly gobbled up. Just around the corner is the Redwoods forest park. Here you can hire mountain bikes and blat through any number of trails. I opt for a two-hour dawdle on the flat before heading back into town for a well-earned micro-brewed beer at the Pig & Whistle, housed in the lovely old Police Station. After a rest in my room, I pack out to Mitai Maori Village for their evening concert and hangi, and tag on the optional but must-do night tour of Rainbow Springs where fairy lights twinkle in the treetops and kiwis scamper about the walk-through enclosure. In an ideal world, there'll be a good band on at Bar Barella and I'll have just enough energy left to down a couple of nightcaps and swing a hip.
The Bay of Plenty is one of the sunniest regions of New Zealand, with Whakatane and the Eastern Bay recording the most sunshine hours (2350 per year on average). In summer, temperatures are somewhat warm, while winter can see temperatures fall as low as 5°C (41°F), but it's slightly warmer on the coast. Rainfall is heavier inland in Rotorua, which can also have long dry spells in summer.
Currency: New Zealand Dollar (NZD)
Symbol: NZ$
| Currency | New Zealand Dollar, NZD (NZ$) |
|---|---|
| Population | 76000 |
| Languages |
(official) Maori (official) English (official) |
| Time zone(s) | GMT/UTC: +14 |
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