Lake Taupo (Taupo-nui-a-Tia), New Zealand
A
great lake for adventure
The Lake Taupo region in New Zealand's volcanic heartland
is rich in Maori tradition. It also has some of the country’s finest
untouched, uncrowded and unique landscapes. The lake itself was the result
of the most violent volcanic eruption the world has seen in the past 5000
years - the ash affected the sunsets as far away as Europe and China.
Maori legend explains the lake a different way. When Ngatoirangi,
the chief tohunga (priest) of the Arawa people, first saw the region he
was dismayed to find a barren basin. Realising his people needed resources
to live, he plucked a large totara tree and hurled it into the crater
to seed a new forest. He aim was true, but the wind flipped the totara
and it landed upside down, piercing the ground with its branches. Water
gushed up through the holes, filling the basin and creating Lake Taupo.
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| Lake
Taupo, New Zealand’s largest, formed explosively
in 126AD. The massive volcanic eruption shifted about
one thousand cubic kilometres of earth. Thirty rivers
and streams flow into the lake, which is New Zealand’s
premier trout fishing destination. Most fish caught
are rainbow trout, averaging 4 pounds. Brown trout are
rarer but bigger – an average of 6 pounds. |
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Photo
by Fay Looney (www.faylooney.com) |
| Click
on the image for larger version |
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Key Features
Australasia's largest lake.
Lake Taupo was created by a gigantic volcanic eruption in 181AD. At 616
square kilometres, it is as big as Singapore Island. The lake's attractive
pumice sand beaches give it the appearance of an inland ocean.
An intriguing geothermal landscape.
Over thousands of years, volcanic action has created a landscape of simmering
craters, boiling mud pools, fumaroles and steam vents. Maori mythology
is richly interwoven with the geothermal features of the region.
Year-round trout fishing.
Rainbow and brown trout were liberated in Lake Taupo more than 100 years
ago. Open for fishing 12 months a year, the lake and its adjoining rivers
represent one of the last true wild trout fisheries in the world.
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