Luxury travel: Fly fishing in Taupō at Poronui Lodge
The gin-clear reaches of New Zealand’s Mōhaka River are an abundant source of brown and rainbow trout. Jacqui Gibson goes fly fishing at Poronui Lodge in Taupō
Rainbow trout caught in New Zealand’s Mōhaka River on a guided experience at Poronui Lodge (image by Jacqui Gibson).
It's no secret trout are tricky to catch.
It’s also no secret that of the dozen weekend guests at Poronui Lodge, a luxury sports lodge in the Central Plateau’s back country, I’m probably the least likely to hook one.
It’s not that I’m all fingers and thumbs all of the time.
It’s just that, well, Antony, a retired ex-pat Brit based in Hong Kong and now living in Taupō, who travelled here by Porshe, is so well-practised in the sport that he can (and does) school me on the lifecycle of the nymph, one of the trout’s favourite foods.
They’re fussy feeders. Such knowledge will improve my changes, I’m told.
Meanwhile, Mike from Wellington is bummed he didn’t bring his waders, so he could cast a line in between shucking and scoffing fresh Coromandel oysters and drinking Marlborough pinot gris.
Because these are near perfect conditions, he says before heading off for a massage.
MEET ANDREW CHRISTMAS
It’s a warm, sunny morning when guide Andrew Christmas pulls up to Poronui Lodge with all the gear and experience I’m hoping I’ll need.
He’s dressed the part in waders, a Poronui Lodge cap and polaroid sunnies (apparently best for seeing trout in the water). A popped collar, vest pockets stuffed with handmade flies and a Japanese carp tattoo on his right forearm complete the outdoorsman look.
The part-time farmer and father of three tells me he’s fished local waters since the age of seven. At 22, he took up guiding. Before Covid-19, the 39-year-old was flat out guiding five days a week — even coaching “a few Americans from the White House” who he can’t possibly name.
As I wriggle into a set of supplied Poronui Lodge waders and boots, Andrew explains the property’s unspoilt rivers are surprisingly easy to get to (by 4WD, on foot and by helicopter), yet almost exclusively fished by guests, making them some of the best in the world.
Soon, we’re driving along Poronui’s rugged dirt tracks en route to the winding Mōhaka River, spotting wild sika deer dashing through scrubland as we go.
THE PORONUI TABLE
My weekend visit to Poronui Lodge coincides with Poronui Table, the lodge’s annual food and wine weekend.
Guests from Tauranga, Wellington and Taupō have travelled to the foothills of the Kaimanawa Mountain Ranges for three days of wining and dining led by Mahi winemaker Brian Bicknell and chefs Martin Bosley and Tom Loughlin.
In between eating, drinking and workshops on wine and Māori kai (food), Poronui guests hike, run and mountain bike the property’s many tracks.
They go bird watching for tūī, bellbirds, ruru, kereru, hawk, falcons and whio, New Zealand’s rare blue duck.
Some fly fish, eel or simply enjoy the river and beech forest views from the private porch of their luxury lodge accommodation.
FISHING THE MŌHAKA RIVER
Under patient instruction from Andrew, I learn to spy a trout (clue for newbies: by standing back a few metres, not by parading up and down the river’s edge) and false cast by repeatedly flicking my line in a continuous forward and backward motion.
Within minutes, Andrew’s skilful casting hooks the first catch of the day, a good-sized rainbow trout.
Taking the rod, I bring it to the surface, alternating between reeling it in and giving it line.
I complete the task as Andrew wades in to scoop the fish out with a net.
Once the hook is removed and a ‘trophy’ pic is taken, I take the soft fish in wet hands and release it back into the river.
Then, we dawdle off to try our luck in another pool.
the blake house
That afternoon, Poronui guests regroup for a barbeque at The Blake House, a private hilltop villa with views over the Taharua River.
As the sun dissolves, we sip rose, snack on pāua fritters and exchange details about the day’s adventures.
Two of the group spent the day hiking with chef Tom to hear stories of the whenua (land) and Tom’s Tūwharetoa ancestors who would gather on the property centuries ago.
Others rode mountain bikes to Safari Camp, Poronui’s riverside glamping site.
I’m quick to say I caught three rainbow trout (though obviously Andrew did most of the work).
Gin-clear waters of the Mōhaka River, New Zealand (image by Jacqui Gibson).
But the real highlight, I venture, was spending time in nature, listening to the splosh and trickle of the river and taking in the colours of the high country.
There was the radiant blue of the mid-morning sky and lime green and browns of the riverside shrubs and trees.
And, of course, there were the rich bronze and orange hues of the wild trout caught and released back into the glassy waters of the Mōhaka River.
DETAILS
Poronui Lodge is 45-minutes’ drive from Taupō. For more information: poronui.com
The writer stayed courtesy of Poronui Lodge.
This story was first published in the New Zealand Herald’s travel pages.