The New Zealand Herald

Escape theme park in Penang, Malaysia is about to open the longest hydroslide in the world — it’s 1140m long and starts at a height of 78m.

Tim Roxborogh on the joys of moaning about your holiday

- Tim Roxborogh hosts Newstalk ZB’s Weekend Collective and blogs at RoxboroghR­eport.com.

Why doesn’t Rotorua have an incredible water park?

Rotorua seems to have everything except the one thing I’d most expect it to have: a ripsnorter of a waterpark with dozens of hydroslide­s. This has always seemed odd to me: the most tourist-centric area in the North Island — a place that also happens to be in geothermal wonderland — doesn’t have a proper waterpark.

I’m not talking about aquatic centres with their gyms, 50m pools and one or two slides. These exist up and down the country and some of them — including Rotorua’s Aquatic Centre — are very good. A new slide is reportedly in the works there and they even have an indoor lazy river. But as well put together as this community complex is, it’s not a tourist attraction.

With Waiwera (north of Auckland) lying derelict and its big rival from the 80s and 90s, Parakai Hot Springs (northwest of Auckland), remaining locked in a time-warp from its decades-ago heyday, Rotorua’s lack of an internatio­nal-standard waterpark is New Zealand’s lack of an internatio­nal-standard waterpark.

From Texas to Queensland, from Malaysia to Vietnam, from Guatemala to Canada, I’ve made a habit out of visiting waterparks wherever I go. Indeed, rumours have swirled for years that the main reason I became a travel writer was to facilitate my obsession with hydroslide­s. Now whether this is true or not, there are few pleasures greater in this life than a full day spent flying through giant tubes in your togs.

Escape theme park in Penang, Malaysia, is as spectacula­r as any I’ve seen and it’s about to get even better with the opening of the longest hydroslide in the world, an 1140m beauty that begins at a height of 78m. Now I’m not suggesting New Zealand — and Rotorua in particular — has to try to outdo this, but as Rotorua is where you go for zip-lining, luge-ing, bungy-ing, Zorbing, shweebing (Google it), jet-boating, rafting, kayaking, trekking, mountain-biking and of course, soaking, well why not a bit of swishing and splashing too?

The burning of the Amazon — don’t get hung up on old photos

I’ve always wanted to go to Brazil. The combinatio­n of beaches, jungle, cities and culture have long made it one of the most enticing, exotic destinatio­ns anywhere in the world. Unfortunat­ely, Brazil is in the news for all the wrong reasons because of the raging fires in the Amazon, arguably the single most pressing environmen­tal issue facing the planet today.

Since word of the fires first started attracting worldwide headlines, I’ve been really bugged by the concerted blowback from those who don’t have environmen­tal matters high on their list of concerns. Defenders of Brazil’s far-right President Bolsonaro have fixated on the widespread sharing of a 16-year old photo of Amazonian bush fires by people such as French President Macron, as if this somehow discredits the horrors of the present-day situation.

It’s the same as if Mt Ruapehu erupted again and a photo from the previous eruption was mistakenly used — does that then mean the present eruption never happened?

The point is, the mere usage of an older photo discredits the current story only if it’s fundamenta­lly different and misleading from what you’re trying to say now. Given upto-the-minute satellite imagery is proving just how severe the devastatio­n across Brazil is, a 16-year old photo of precious rainforest being ravaged by fire isn’t misleading in the slightest. Besides, we shouldn’t get distracted from the point Macron and so many others are making: the Amazon is the “lungs of the world”.

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