My original tour was to Rainbow Farms, which has sheep shearing, rainbow trout, and other agricultural displays. That sounded really boring so I changed it and instead went off and did my own thing: 1) Te Whakarewarewa, 2) Hell's Gate, and 3) Zorb.
Te Whakarewarewa (Whaka for short) was partly a Maori cultural tour, followed by a look at a boiling mud pit and Pohutu geyser. The culture tour featured wood carving and linen weaving, and a description of the Maori welcoming ceremony: three warriors come out to greet strangers, and leave a stone on the ground (pick it up for friendship, leave it for war). If friendly, a woman would then sing a welcoming song and everybody would go inside the home. The home represents the body of an ancestor, so the frame has a carving of a head, arms and fingers along the front of the roof, the spine at the top to the back of the roof, and then the legs and feet.
There was a small kiwi exhibit, and I was able to see one of these native nocturnal birds hopping around. After that, we saw boiling mud pits and Pohotu geyser. I took a movie using my camera so I hope it turns out.
Boiling Mud at Whaka

Hell's Gate was a large geothermally active park, featuring a hot waterfall, and dozens of small bubbling pools of water and mud. The landscape was bizarre: green trees and grass in the background, and blasted white/yellow rock venting steam in the foreground. We were allowed to dip our hands into one of the pools, called Sulphur Lake, and I did. It was probably 120 degrees F or so. The park also had a hot waterfall, and plenty of swirling steam.
Devil's Cauldron

At Hell's Gate Sulphur Field

Finally, Zorb. You may have seen this on The Amazing Race. Basically, you crawl inside a large plastic bubble and roll down a hill. I did the "Zig Zag Hydro Zorb" ride, which meant the inner chamber was partly filled with warm water, so I could slip-n-slide all the way down. Instead of the straight path down I was rolled down the side track which had two or three hairpin turns. It was a huge amount of fun!
Zorb!

Note: I took a movie of the Zorb rolling down the zig zag course; I'll post it soon.
After the day's activites, I walked around Rotorua, visiting Government Gardens and then Kuirau park. Both of these parks have beautiful landscaping, and more thermal areas. Kuirau park especially - it has flowers growing all around signs that read "Danger: Thermal Area". How in the world do the flowers grow around a geothermal steam vent when I have a hard time getting flowers to grow in my home garde? The landscaping was pretty, and I stood there and admired it until the wind shifted and I got a nice lungful of sulphurous steam.
Government Gardens

Thermal area flowers

Steam

I am there amidst the steam!
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