Rotorua; Friday, Vov. 24. The Final Word.
Having spent almost 5 weeks in Australia and New Zealand, I have to point out that people see things differently here.


Au revoir, Sean & Eileen.



A view of Mount Tarawera as it is today.
Another photograph of the most photographed building in Rotorua. It was built as a bathhouse but is now a Museum. It is part of the municipal park called Government Park.
The "stick game" used to improve dexterity and hand to eye co-ordination.
The entrance to the Maori Big (Community) House.

and a very picturesque weeping willow.
In Cathedral Square there was the Cathedral which gives the city its name
and a strange looking artifactr resembling a vase.
A most upscale Starbucks,
even the building of the local newspaper had class.

But after we came through the Arthur's Pass at the top of the divide, it really improved and we got some great views.
There was an open platform at the end of our car where we could take pictures without the reflections from the windows, but it was sort of wild there when the train eas going fast.

A very exciting four hours.


And took a couple of pictures of the Franz Joseph Glacier
It seems very odd to have a glacier down in the temperate rainforest, but it is because a vast icefield up at the top is feeding down a very narrow valley, it is deep and moves fast, so that it stays frozen.

We went all the way out to the Tasman Sea and saw a New Zealand fur seal sunning herself on the rocks.
Pictures don't do it justice.

Along the way back to Queenstown we stopped to take a picture of a tree fern
And a cascading mountain stream.