They are in a region of the North Island known as the Bay of Plenty and close to a larger lake called Rotorua in an area famous for thermal activity such as geysers, hot water springs and boiling mud pools.
This depends a lot on what "near" means. Rotorua might count, being near Lake Rotorua and several other lakes near it. Other than that, however, no city is near enough one major lake, let alone two, to be considered.
The most commonly known lakes named after colours are the Blue and Green lakes in Rotorua. There are also 3 other lesser known blue lakes in Canterbury, Otago, and Tasman. The blue lake in Rotorua is also known as Lake Tikitapu.
In the South Island the Blue Cod is probably the most popular sea fish for eating. In the North Island this would be the Snapper.
Blue on white.
Blue Fairy Penguin
boba fett is green his father jango fett is blue.
green and blue
The most commonly known lakes named after colours are the Blue and Green lakes in Rotorua. There are also 3 other lesser known blue lakes in Canterbury, Otago, and Tasman. The blue lake in Rotorua is also known as Lake Tikitapu.
You would get blue-green.
You would get blue-green.
Blue green bacteria has color pigments and bacteria doesn't and bacteria is made with many products for humans to use and blue green is harmful they live inc ponds ,mrivers , lakes
I would Say mixed blue and green
They would look blue; the green wouldn't show because the blue goes in very deep and the green would be unnoticeable.
When naming a tertiary colour the primary colour is named first. Therefore it would be Blue-green. Followed in order by: Green and Yellow-green.
green because there is a lot of green grass in farmlands
Black in a black/red/green set, or blue in a blue/brown/green set. The hot is red or brown and the earth is green (note: I'm in New Zealand and assuming that the colors are the same).
i dont think you can but i would try to use green and blue but more green than blue
Blue. I like blue.