Lake Kaitawa Fairy Springs Track
Kaitawa Power Station, Tuai, Te Urerewa
Kaitawa Power Station, Tuai, Te Urerewa
Lake Kaitawa is an artificial lake formed in the 1920s as part of the system delivering water to the Tuai hydro electric power station. A track on the left of the powerhouse crosses a footbridge over a large stream, the upper part of the Waikaretaheke River, which is diverted here by canal into Lake Kaitawa.
The track leads around the lake past some majestic rimu trees to a turn-off near a small bridge. A left turn here takes you to a translucent green pool in the forest. Water wells up gently as “Fairy Springs” in this pool. The water flows from Lake Waikaremoana through “leaks” in the lake bed. Attempts were made from 1948 to 1955 to seal the leaks to maximise the water available for power generation. But water still percolates through gaps in the rock (landslide debris from the Ngamoko Range) to emerge as springs feeding the upper Waikaretaheke River and Fairy Springs.
The track leads around this pool and back to the bridge. Return to the power station via the same path in, or climb over the stile and return to the power station along a gravel road.
After a refreshing day in the great outdoors you might enjoy a bit of R&R ...