So continuing on New Years day we spent 2 nights in Waitomo. We stopped in Otorahanga along the way so Sher could see a Kiwi. The pics are hard to see, but it is the only pics we have of a live Kiwi bird as they are nocturnal. We also stopped to photgraph some of the local roadkill...yet another dead possum, but this one was fresh!
So here are the PP's in their stunning caving outfits. We got to learn how to abseil first, the cave is literally in the middle of farmland, you would never know it was there and apparently many livestock haven't either and have fallen to their deaths. So we abseiled (or rappeled) 27m down into a beautiful cave where we; donned in gumboots, wetsuits, and headlamps, floated on an underground river on inner tubes. The main attraction is the gloworms, which you can see hanging from the ceiling, with the lamps off the entire place is black save for a few million glowworms lining the cave ceiling. Pretty darn cool, and pure silence to boot, quite an amazing experience. So in between we went caving and climbing through rivers, tiny spaces, up down and over rock. If we were to go through the entire cave system it would take an experienced person 9 hours to complete, it goes on for miles underground. We went in and came out the same place, but were underground for about 4 hours. That was enough, it was awesome but we were all glad to see sunlight after our 20m free climb straight up a wet wall of rock. No easy task but the 3 of us triumphed and were even more happy to get out of the less than flattering suits and to shower off our mud covered bodies. Excellent way to spend the day...
If you look to the upper left in this photo you can see the platform we abseiled from
- The Glow worms in the dark on the cave ceiling
- A weta (Spider/grasshopper-looking thing) About the size of your palm
- An eel
- The Glow worms hanging from the ceiling in the light, they use the sticky shiny strands to capture their meals!
So after the Waitomo Caves we drove south and stopped at the Marokopa Falls pictured above. They don't even look real!! From there we headed to Taranaki, a peninsula with Mount Taranaki in the center of it, this is where the Last Samuri was filmed with Tom Cruise because it so closely resembles Mount Fuji in Japan.
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2 comments:
These pictures all camr through as usual. Is the picture of that green worm eel thing one of the glow worms and is that them hanging in those long shapes from the ceiling? How big were these things??? Love Lor
Hello Lori! The green eel, is just your regular eel swimming through the cave river. He was about 3 feet long and as fat as a hotdog. The ones hanging from the ceiling are the glow worms and they are tiny and hard to see. Our guide would smack his tube on the river bed and make a loud "bang", this would agitate the glow worms and then they would glow brightly. Pretty cool! Miss you! Love Jode
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