Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
advertise
Boating New Zealand Boat Reviews
Reviews
Boating New Zealand News
News
Boating New Zealand Sports
Sport
Boating New Zealand Lifestyle
Lifestyle
BOAT-REVIEWS-MOBILE
Boat Reviews
BOAT-NEWS-MOBILE
News
BOAT-SPORTS-MOBILE
Sports
BOAT-LIFESTYLE-MOBILE
Lifestyle
HomeLifestyleBoat ProfileLakeland Queen Rotorua relaunch: the return of the lady of the lake

Lakeland Queen Rotorua relaunch: the return of the lady of the lake

From her 1987 debut to her 2025 resurrection, Rotorua’s sternwheeler has carried generations of stories across Lake Rotorua.

The 1987 arrival

When the Lakeland Queen first slid into Lake Rotorua in 1987, she looked like something out of a Mark Twain novel. At 32 metres long and two decks high, her stern paddle turned slowly, pushing the big vessel across the lake in stately calm.

Locals had never seen anything like it — a purpose-built Mississippi-style sternwheeler, constructed in Rotorua in 1986 and launched the following year. She was powered by a 240-horsepower Cummins diesel, her thrust delivered through hydraulics to an eight-bladed stern paddle. Smooth and quiet, she could move without passengers barely noticing.

Rotorua’s new “Lady of the Lake” was, quite simply, unique.

- Advertisement, article continues below -

Three decades as an icon

Over the next thirty years, the Lakeland Queen became as familiar as the sulphur smell drifting across the city. She carried tour groups by day and wedding parties by night. Families celebrated anniversaries on board; couples marked engagements with dinner cruises. At full capacity she could seat more than 200 guests across her two decks, served from her galley and bar.

For skipper Melvyn Bowen, she was more than a workplace. In 2017 he reflected on her three decades afloat, recalling the pride of captaining the only sternwheeler passenger vessel in New Zealand. She was occasionally called Te Ao Kapurangi, a name that acknowledged Rotorua’s bicultural story.

// Photo credit: Lakeland Queen Rotorua

The heartbeat falters

That continuity ended in 2021. When Covid-19 border closures gutted tourism, the Lakeland Queen was laid up and moved into dry dock at Sulphur Point.

For a time, she was kept alive: engines turned over weekly, systems checked. But her jetty deteriorated. A 2022 engineering report requested by the Rotorua District Council described the wharf piles as “severely rotted” and steel beams as “severely corroded,” rating the structure in “poor to unsatisfactory condition”.

By 2024, her operator had gone into liquidation. RNZ called it “a sad day for Rotorua” as the “beautiful icon” sat idle and moulding ashore. To many, it felt as if the city had lost part of its identity.

- Advertisement, article continues below -

A bargain and a gamble

The turnaround came from an unlikely quarter. In 2024, Damon and Arna Hagaman bought the Lakeland Queen out of liquidation. Damon, son of Scenic Hotel founder Earl Hagaman, knew that was only the start.

The Rotorua Daily Post (28 August 2025) reported that in the year that followed, the couple spent more than $2.5 million on restoration, with another million still earmarked for galley and bar refits. They were joined by contractors, volunteers, and even entertainers — singer Howie Morrison Jnr traded his microphone for a paintbrush to help with finishing work, before stepping into his new role as entertainment manager.

Most importantly, they called in Rotorua firm Sitewide Engineering. Their team stripped and rebuilt the Queen’s hydraulic systems, refurbished the paddle drive, overhauled the bow thruster, and restored the steering gear. Without that mechanical resurrection, the Queen would never have moved again.

The relaunch

On 28 August 2025, just after 8am, the Lakeland Queen eased back into Lake Rotorua.

- Advertisement, article continues below -

The Queen is now alongside her jetty, receiving finishing touches. With more work to do before she can resume commercial operation, cruises are expected to restart late 2025, with dinner sailings, themed nights, and live entertainment all on the programme.

Share this
Nereyda 580 Regal
Article
Article

The 580 Regal, twenty years on

Boat Profile
The 580 Regal first appeared on the New Zealand boating scene under the Sea Nymph name. By the early...
Article
Article

Why we kept coming back to the Fi-Glass Warrior

Boat Profile
The first time Boating New Zealand reviewed the Fi-Glass Warrior, the conditions were poor enough to...
Dickey Semifly 36
Article
Article

Eight years on, the Dickey Semifly 36 still proves the point

Dickey
Boat Profile
New Zealand’s marine industry is beginning to find its feet after a tough early-2020s economic downt...

Comments

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand. Subscribe to view comments and join the conversation. Choose your plan →

This conversation is moderated by Boating New Zealand.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Boating New Zealand
Boating New Zealandhttps://www.boatingnz.co.nz
Boating NZ is New Zealand’s premier marine title devoted to putting its readers behind the wheel of the latest trailerboats, yachts and launches to hit the market. It inspires with practical content and cruising adventures, leads the fleet with its racing coverage and is on the pulse of the latest maritime news and innovation.

LATEST NEWS