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In May 2004 I worked for a week in Auckland, NZ, during which
it rained for most of the time. I had the weekend off and
at first considered driving up to the Bay of Islands, but
as the weather was fairly poor and the drive a bit long, I
was advised to visit Cathedral Bay at Coramandel, where the
weather is almost always good. I'm glad I did!
I left fairly late on Saturday, as it was still raining until
mid afternoon. I drove south from Auckland around Thames Bay
(See Pics here), finally driving into Hahei after dark.
The next morning I got up early and took pictures of the
sun coming up on Hahei Beach (see below). I had considered
taking a kayak tour which went to the islands you can see,
then onto Cathedral Bay, but the operator was unsure if he
was going due to the poor weather that had been around lately.
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After sunrise I went back to bed for a bit (I'd rented a
nice sea shack in Hahei) then checked out and went to Hotwater
Beach. This place was one of the most unique beaches I have
ever visited, and I've seen a few now!
Basically a section of the beach just above the low tide line
sits atop a volcanically heated reservoir of water that leaks
out of the sand. If you dig a small hole it will quickly become
filled with steaming hot water.
As the spring is near the low tide line, it is only accessible
around one hour either side of low tide, the rest of the time
it is covered by the ocean.
Most visitors to the beach bring a small shovel and dig a
little spa close to the waterline. I went for a surf in the
very chilly 13°C ocean then quickly stripped off my wetsuit
and jumped shivering into the closest steaming water hole
I could find. I tell ya... I wish we had this set up down
in Melbourne.. it would have made surfing in winter time alot
more fun...
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After Hotwater beach I drove back to Hahei and walked along
the coastal track to Cathedral Bay, which was about a 45 minute
trip.
Cathedral bay is featured prominentlyin New Zealand tourist
brochures, and with good reason. The bay is actually two bays,
seperated by a large sea cave. The first bay is the nicest,
it even includes a small waterfall in the top corner. The
sea cave is about fifty metres deep, see picture below, and
gives a clue to how the stone cathedrals were formed.. they
themselves are all that remains of older sea caves that have
since erroded away.
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Cathedral
Bay Waterfall, NZ
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© All Pictures Copyright Corey Hamilton. Pictures
for personal use only.
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