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What's that smell?

Alison Mitchell Alison Mitchell | 08:37 UK time, Tuesday, 19 February 2008

For the travelling England supporter, New Zealand is best traversed by road.

To fly is to miss out on some spectacular scenery, from the snow capped mountains of the Southern Alps, to the beautiful inlets of the , to the rolling green hills of Matamata (Hobbiton, for all those fans).

However the most intriguing and fascinating region has to be that which you pass through en route from Auckland to Napier - a journey which many supporters will have done ahead of the fourth ODI.

The State Highway takes you through the country’s most active geothermal region. Winding down the car window in lets in a whiff normally associated with rotten eggs. It is in fact the smell of sulphur emanating from the ground to the intense geothermal activity. The odour is so pungent in places that Rotorua has been nicknamed Sulphur City.

Once your nose acclimatises, your eyes can feast on steaming fumaroles, ‘blopping’ mud pools, and if you are lucky you might catch a gushing geyser (although one suspects there may be a human hand involved in inducing several of the geysers so as not to disappoint the passing visitor).

A number of areas are designated ‘Thermal Parks’ where you can tread the board walks across colourful steaming silica terraces stained yellow and orange by minerals, and stare in awe at vast azure steaming lakes. Perhaps the most famous of all is the scalding Champagne Pool in , which I visited a couple of years ago. Staring across the vista it is scarcely believable that it is 62 metres deep, with a surface temperature of around 75 degrees centigrade. It is a striking turquoise in colour, with traces of arsenic and antimony leaving bright orange deposits at the edge. All the while, steam billows up towards the sky. Breathtaking.

The road from Rotorua to Napier features the largest silica terrace in the southern hemisphere

The noises are as much a part of the geothermal experience. If you tilt your ear close to a rock face, you can often hear water furious bubbling beneath the surface like a boiling kettle.

The activity is all due to the subduction of the Pacific Plate beneath the Australian plate. Friction creates heat, which melts rock into magma. This molten rock either bursts to the surface in the form of volcanic activity or it remains within the Earth's crust, turning water beneath the earth’s surface into superheated steam.

Driving through the region takes me back to the many hours spent in the classroom and the university lecture hall, where it was a struggle to picture quite what a fumarole was or what was meant by a geyser. Physical geography means so much more when it is experienced first hand. Wouldn’t it be fantastic if you could go on a field trip to New Zealand!

Meanwhile the England team have settled into Napier, a town which challenges Miami for the title of . It was obliterated by an earthquake in 1931 and rebuilt within just a couple of years at a time when Art Deco was all the rage in Europe.

The team’s arrival a few days ago coincided with the town’s Art Deco Festival weekend. Vintage cars, big band music, and 20s and 30s regalia was everywhere. As I write, there is still an impressive vintage car parked outside our accommodation.

The town can have the strange effect of making you feel as if you are in a time warp, but England, trailing 2-1 in the series, will have to snap themselves back into the present on Wednesday if there is to be any future decider in Christchurch.

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  • 1.
  • At 12:01 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • David Lim wrote:

That is definitely one of the best parts of New Zealand - driving along Lake Taupo and then the Desert Road through Tongariro National Park on the way to Wellington in the south or Napier or in the east. The weather has been a cracker over the last few days in New Zealand and in Napier the good weather always tends to stay for longer being so far out east. Hopefully the cricket will be a cracker at McLean Park, home of the Central Stags and the mighty Hawkes Bay Magpies (rugby team) !

  • 2.
  • At 12:43 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • David Rayner wrote:

Excellent piece of geographical writing - rare to see these days in something like a sports report. Really evocative of this wonderful country as well as informative.

As a geographer, it is great to see someone like yourself using your love of geography in your current job. Children studying geography need more role models like you. Keep up the good work!

Just awesome... everyone should go but then not too many! New Zealand is the most beautiful country on earth... bar none! :)

  • 4.
  • At 01:18 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Richard Barton wrote:

I've spent a few days in Rotorua and the thermal pools are amazing, however after a while the smell can really start to get to you. I recommend heading to the south western corners of New Zealand to Milford Sound and the likes for an awesome visual feast.

  • 5.
  • At 02:25 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • ash wrote:

go england!

  • 6.
  • At 02:34 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Josh wrote:

I fuly agree with all the comments, and may I also recommend a visit to the Lady Knox geyser?

The nearby mudpools (largest in the Southern Hemisphere) are well worth a visit too, although their name escapes me.


As far as the cricket is concerned, England must not get carried away. They have won once, but they still trail and New Zealand will still feel they have momentum, and they certainly still have the advantage in the series.


  • 7.
  • At 03:29 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Josh wrote:

I fuly agree with all the comments, and may I also recommend a visit to the Lady Knox geyser?

The nearby mudpools (largest in the Southern Hemisphere) are well worth a visit too, although their name escapes me.


As far as the cricket is concerned, England must not get carried away. They have won once, but they still trail and New Zealand will still feel they have momentum, and they certainly still have the advantage in the series.


  • 8.
  • At 04:37 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Steve wrote:

That is by far the best area of the North Island, Rotorua to Taupo.

Despite the glorifying of our own country's scenery, it is a long way from being the most beautiful place in the world.

If 85% of NZ's land (predominantly native bush) hadn't been cleared to make way for industrial sized agricultural production, Then NZ would be a contender.

Imagine having the Milford and Tongariro national parks as the norm and not the exception.

  • 9.
  • At 04:54 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Alan Parkinson wrote:

A good description with plenty of geographical detail ! As you say, it would indeed be good to take school pupils to New Zealand. With modern whiteboards and images and a little imagination (and some help from the science department) you can give a bit of a taste for what this area is like.
Let's have some more geography-sport fusions !

  • 10.
  • At 09:49 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Dr James Brasington wrote:

Great to hear your call for geographical education inspired by fieldwork.

I couldn't agree more, but you might be surprised to realize that at the Aberystwyth University, we do actually take 40 Geography students to New Zealand each Easter.

It certainly helps bring the subject to life and there is no more dynamic landscape to help carry the message home.

Keep up the good work!

Great to hear your call for geographical education inspired by fieldwork.

I couldn't agree more, but you might be surprised to realize that at the Aberystwyth University, we do actually take 40 Geography students to New Zealand each Easter.

It certainly helps bring the subject to life and there is no more dynamic landscape to help carry the message home.

Keep up the good work!

Great to hear your call for geographical education inspired by fieldwork.

I couldn't agree more, but you might be surprised to realize that at the Aberystwyth University, we do actually take 40 Geography students to New Zealand each Easter.

It certainly helps bring the subject to life and there is no more dynamic landscape to help carry the message home.

Keep up the good work!

Great to hear your call for geographical education inspired by fieldwork.

I couldn't agree more, but you might be surprised to realize that at the Aberystwyth University, we do actually take 40 Geography students to New Zealand each Easter.

It certainly helps bring the subject to life and there is no more dynamic landscape to help carry the message home.

Keep up the good work!

Great to hear your call for geographical education inspired by fieldwork.

I couldn't agree more, but you might be surprised to realize that at the Aberystwyth University, we do actually take 40 Geography students to New Zealand each Easter.

It certainly helps bring the subject to life and there is no more dynamic landscape to help carry the message home.

Keep up the good work!

Great to hear your call for geographical education inspired by fieldwork.

I couldn't agree more, but you might be surprised to realize that at the Aberystwyth University, we do actually take 40 Geography students to New Zealand each Easter.

It certainly helps bring the subject to life and there is no more dynamic landscape to help carry the message home.

Keep up the good work!

  • 16.
  • At 10:53 PM on 19 Feb 2008,
  • Alex wrote:

Careful what you wish for!
As a pupil at primary school an hour from Rotorua I can tell you I went on many field trips to look at geysers. Then as a pupil of a high school closer to Taupo I again went on plenty of field trips to see geysers. My eyes now glaze over with boredom whenever I see a geyser, yet I love geography and majored in it at university, I just don't love geysers.

  • 17.
  • At 04:26 AM on 20 Feb 2008,
  • Warren Wiggins wrote:

Geat article. Having been born in Rotorua the surrounding geothermal activity is so ingrained in the way of life there.
I can, however, assure you there is no human hand involved in making the geysers "perform". There is enough volatility in the region without man thinking he can surpass it. Saying that though, for years and years locals would put down water bores to tap into the hot water for heating etc. and this drawing off of the water did finally start affecting the geysers, especially the famous Pohutu Geyser. So about 15 -20 years ago (may be longer) the Local Authority banned this practice and all private bores were sealed. The result, Whakawerawera is back to its former glory as I can remember it in the 50's. Human "intervention" saved this for future generations to enjoy.

  • 18.
  • At 03:21 PM on 20 Feb 2008,
  • David wrote:

Just the thing to get me through a dull afternoon (both work-wise and climate-wise). Thanks Alison (and the other contribtors). As James Taylor said, I've never really been but I'd sure like to go!

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