![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvBep-cPcHjXtmiB6Vbl2cSingZoaNmBlPvWVlWS_n-8l4L6i3x_ViibDO7kncFphbHcSBB2hlSLudW6EFhXjJTXY5i2DM0_Q3BtAWrisftX3Ez_UwYLZ8_qFydJId3pM60Va3EdptdwY/s320/Lake+Taupo.jpg)
Today it is a large and deep lake, full of rainbow and brown trout. Anglers come from all around the world to fish in its waters. The photo shows the three snow capped peaks of Ruapehu, Tongariro and Ngaruhoe in the distance.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi6JIAOKmMzAa3j4sObxozjKDca6HHkWHgLRXHNZvfyQ7uyKqBTOhMn4bpkduOEjMNC7lhl5yhnfobVaE-BqRBjFyo3P_7AwQgllWOqHv1pkSnelKVRJeLEuODifOd3j3rp9gmaDBTNIFE/s640/DSCN9612-lake_Taupo_ja_the_blue_lake.jpeg)
The pic on the pic above is taken from the other direction and shows the steaming Crater Lake at the summit of Tongariro in the right foreground with a small arm of Lake Taupo in the distance.
This whole area is a mass of volcanic activity past and present. Rotorua is close by and the geo-thermal area between it and Taupo is full of interesting features such as geysers, and boiling mud pools, hot water pools, and power stations which use the ferocious steam to make electricity.
When I was young, once in a while, some poor person would fall in a boiling mud pool or down a geyser - it was horrifying. But now all the hazards are well-mapped and well-fenced so we've had no accidents for a long time.
1 comment:
I really enjoyed this. Taupo is dear to my heart.
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