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Ibis Hotel, Rotorua
From Wai-O-Tapu we backtracked northward to Rotorua and checked into our hotel, the Hotel
Ibis. The Ibis is
located on Rangiuru
Street,
not far from the lakefront.
It is adjacent to the Rotorua Novotel (both are Accor hotels) but is somewhat
less expensive.
In general, Rotorua hotels
are not cheap, Rotorua being the tourist magnet that it is. But the
Ibis had a good winter rate for the three of us, and even included a buffet breakfast
in the rate. Getting a room on the side of the hotel
facing away from the lake probably helped to keep the rate lower.
Not having had a decent
amount of rest since Los Angeles,
we spent a few hours giving our bodies a chance to recover from the
shock to which we’d subjected them. In
other words, we didn’t do much of anything until it was dark (which happened
around 5, as it was winter).
At this point we
roused ourselves and went out in search of food.
As it was quite cold out (somewhat colder
than Auckland), we got into the car and drove around, ending up on
Fenton Street, a north-south thoroughfare that eventually becomes the main
highway south of the town. Before
going too far,
we found the “Amazing Thai” restaurant and discovered the food to be
pretty good, though the prices were high for Thai food.
Amazing Thai Restaurant
Then we went looking for a place where we
could get drinking water and snack food.
In Rotorua, this means going to Pak ‘n’ Save, not far up
Fenton from Amazing Thai.
Nella and Connie at Pak 'n' Save
Pak‘n’ Save is a
supermarket with a kind of a no-frills look to it.
It’s hard to say whether this is reflected in
their prices, as we didn’t get a chance to do a lot of comparison
shopping.
Its prices were massively
cheaper than those at the hotel room minibar, though.
We always find it interesting to look around
in grocery stores in foreign countries and see how the basics of life
resemble and differ from those to which we are accustomed.
In New Zealand,
grocery stores are very similar to those in the U.S, except you are expected to bag your
own groceries (in bags that cost you ten cents apiece, motivating the
regular customer to purchase the one-dollar reusable bags that are also for
sale). The same basic categories of merchandise are
available, with a few differences in the details.
Kiwifruit Display
Kiwi fruit, for example, is extremely
inexpensive ($1.29 per kilogram on our visit, equivalent to about 45
cents a pound in U.S. money; two kiwi fruits weighed one-fifth of a kilogram,
or less than half a pound).
Vegemite
Vegemite, a breakfast spread which tastes like yeasty salt and looks like congealed motor
oil, and which is a staple in Australia, gets a decent amount of shelf space,
implying it’s somehow successfully made the migration across the Tasman Sea.
Beverages
And
L&P is for sale. L&P
is a soft drink found only in New Zealand.
The P stands for Paeroa,
which is a North Island
town which was well known for its mineral water, and which is now well
known for L&P.
The L stands for lemon,
which is a citrus fruit.
When in
New Zealand, I
drink a lot of L&P, not because it’s the greatest-tasting soft
drink ever (though it’s not bad), but because I know that after leaving the
country, I won’t see it again until my next visit.
Which, for unknown reasons, is difficult to accept.
From Pak ‘n’ Save we returned to the Ibis, to attempt sleep during the
non-daylight hours and to contemplate the visit with the Maoris we’d planned for the
next morning, at the Te Puia Cultural Centre.
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