After putting our clocks back an hour ready
for winter, we woke up bright and early to clear blue skies and the sun just
poking its head over the horizon but, wow, was it cold!
Nevertheless, we donned our swimming cozies
and, with hired spade in hand we parked the van on the front at the Hot Water
Beach and headed off across the beach feeling pretty chilly and thinking how
daft all this seems. Low tide was at 10:15am and, as the hot spring rises up
into the sand somewhere between high and low tides, we were told the best time
to get there was between 1 and 2 hours either side of low tide, so our 8:15am
trudge across the beach was a bit early. Fierce this Pacific surf can be as
well!
We were accompanied by plenty of other
equally daft people, all carrying their spades and all heading for the same
small stretch of beach, including an older couple from Toronto who felt as
ridiculous as us! When we got there there were already quite a few others
digging holes, so we selected an area nearby just in front of the surf and
started to dig. Didn’t seem very warm we thought – and we were right, an
American guy came by and said we were digging in the wrong place, the hot water
only comes up in certain areas, the other people were in one, but there was
another about 8 feet in front of some rocks that was about 65 C temperature.
Unfortunately the surf intermittently revealed maybe 8 or 10 feet of beach, but
then swept in up to the rocks.
Over we went with the couple from Toronto
and started to dig, saw it swept away by a big wave, dug again, had it swept
away and so on for some time. People walked past saying ‘is it hot?’, I replied
‘well, I’m hot!’. But it was, in certain places it almost burned our feet and
we were glad of the cooling Pacific waters! After half hour or so the Toronto
couple began to make progress so we joined forces with them to try to build a
wall strong enough to hold back the tide.
Eventually we made a pool big enough
for us, but it was only on the edge of the rising hot water so was tepid in
temperature, not quite the steaming bath we expected, but warm nonetheless. A
good time was had by all, except for the blister I grew, and we left after
about half an hour of soaking and chatting with our new found friends.
After a quick cold shower at the edge of
the beach (it was now quite a bit warmer as the sun was up and the sky still
blue), we changed and headed off to Cathedral Cove, another thing that is best
seen around low tide. A brisk 45 minute walk from the car park took us down on
to a very tropical looking beach with beautifully sculptured rocks and a
magnificent arch through to another beach with more superb scenery. The
coastline round here is very picturesque with lots of small islands and rocky
outcrops making it very beautiful and certainly living up to the peninsula’s
reputation.
Having dodged the small red cones
positioned along the beach, we noticed a number of people in wetsuits running
along the beach, through the cathedral arch and then throwing themselves into
the sea and swimming off round the headland to the cheers of onlookers. It
turned out to be a swimming and running competition, starting from Hahei beach,
competitors had to swim round to the far end of cathedral beach, run along the
beach and then swim back to Hahei beach, a total of 4km.
It was also possible
to just do the run and swim back, a distance of only 2km. It was all very
impressive, particularly to me as a length of a swimming pool is enough for me!
After visiting Cooks Beach, which is in
Mercury Bay, named by Captain Cook in 1769 after he recorded a transit of the
planet Mercury past the Sun, we ended up at a very pleasant campsite with
almost no-one else here (it really is very quiet everywhere now – except Hot
Water Beach!). We visited two other campsites on the way, paying over $30 at
one then finding it to be horrible, we asked for our money back, which the
owner did very amicably saying ‘No problem, we want people to be happy in New
Zealand, even if they aren’t here. Have a great holiday!’ How good is that?
(would have been better if his campsite was better though!)
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