Page:Travel letters from New Zealand, Australia and Africa (1913).djvu/87

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The big sights are always just over when I come along. . . . At this hotel, when you wish to take a bath, you go out to the manager's office, and find a key hanging beside the door. This key opens a door down in the canyon, back of the hotel. The bath consists of a great pool of hot water. There is no roof over the pool, but it is fenced in. Within the enclosure, also, is a pool of cold water, into which you may plunge after a hot bath. Certain hours are devoted to gentlemen, and certain hours to ladies. . . . Rooms in this hotel are also lighted with candles, and I dislike to blow out my candle and go to bed, as I can smell the extinguished wick half the night. . . . The food in New Zealand is universally good; we have come to the conclusion that the New-Zealanders are famous cooks. . . . We find a good many private cars touring in this section, as the government devotes much attention to roads, which are generally excellent, barring the terrible dust. Yesterday we met a little Ford machine, and it seemed to be kicking up about as much dust as any of them. . . . The rainfall here is greater than in the best agricultural sections of the United States, but the bulk of the rain falls in winter, whereas our moisture is better distributed over the growing season.



Tuesday, January 21.—We have made three trips today, looking at the wonders in the Wairakei field; we have devoted at least nine hours to sightseeing, which is not a bad day's work. One of the wonders is the Blow Hole; a great hole on top of a mountain out of