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Enjoying Lake Taupo in a kayak in Winter. Home of the swim leg of Ironman New Zealand. |
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Beth and I had a few days vacation in Taupo this past
week. We did the Tongariro Alpine Crossing, but that deserves its own
post and we spent an afternoon on Lake Taupo yesterday. Our day started
a little slow as we did the Tongariro Alpine Crossing the day prior and
had to catch a bus at 6:20 am. We were pretty keen on doing some
kayaking prior to coming down as the lake is pretty awesome and the
weather cooperated as it was a balmy 6C (about 43 F) out. We were
helped out with this endevour by Laura at
C&K Taupo,
who delivered the sea kayak to Hot Spring Beach and then picked it up
at the Taupo Yacht Club. This is a service they typically don't offer,
but as it is the slow season I think she wanted something to do. After
all we were the only kayakers on the lake. We saw a couple fishing
boats and a single sail boat. We both wore our new macpac rain jackets
and they preformed as I thought they would. I've been pushing the gear
now for about 7 weeks and I've only worn the merino wool, which I love.
The jackets kept the water out, granted it wasn't rain but splash, and
they breathed really well as my shirt was dry even though I was putting
in some good effort.
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Point on the East Coast of the bay. |
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Laura showed up at the appointed time to drop off
the kayak and showed us all the stuff we would be sent out with; spray
skirt, bilge pump, floatation device for paddle in-case we flipped the
kayak, and PFDs. I'm only a stranger to the floatation device that
straps to the paddle to help flipping the kayak back over, but its
pretty easy to understand. However, flipping over in this cold lake
would definately suck and getting this on would probably take some
time. She didn't hesitate to mentioned that the kayak was designed and
made local to New Zealand. I don't recall the brand, but its probably
posted on their site. The kayak weighed 20kg, which is about as much as
our single recreation kayak back home. That is pretty gnarly if you
ask me. The kayak handled well and had 2 dry container areas.
Important as I had my hiking boots with me.
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Opted for a bright color that could be used for sailing as well. |
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After we donned the provided gear and got ready to
push in, a local gentleman wondered over to tell us to be careful of the
strong Taupo winds and then gave us a hand with pushing in. We yelled
our thanks and then proceeded to do our best to make some headway. It
was made difficult as I didn't put down the rudder and it was held
firmly in place by a metal hook. We must have looked like drunken
pirates! We paddled for a little ways down the coast before backing in
and unhooking the rudder. I'm pretty sure we were still being watched
by the locals, but I didn't want to come back into the same place to get
the kayak in working order. With the rudder down, we proceeded to
paddle around the east coast of the bay to a point that Laura told us
about and then headed directly west to another point and then back to
the yacht club. We paddled for about 2.5 hours and covered
approximately 16km.
Some background info from
wiki about
the lake: largest lake by surface area in New Zealand and 2nd largest
in Oceania. You can see Lake Taupo from the Tongariro Alpine
Crossing. It is drained by the
Waikato River (New Zealand's longest river) which the
Huka Falls
is on. Taupo is home to Ironman New Zealand and Lake Taupo is home to
the swim leg and there is 2 laps of the hilly area for the bike. There
is also the
Lake Taupo Cycle Challenge,
where you have 12 options to suit your pain enjoyment level. There is
the soft cheeks of 1 lap (160km) to the buns of titanium known as the
Extreme Enduro, which consists of 8 (160km) laps! Each lap has 1308m of
climbing. This ride starts at noon on Wed and while there is no
cut-off the full event prize giving is at 6pm on Sat. Who wants to
start training for the November challenge? From the organizers, the
enduro is a challenge and not a race.
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