New Zealand
Our journey
Our 1730 mile journey took us from the
devastation of earthquake damaged
Christchurch to beautiful Mount Cook,
the lakeside towns of Wanaka,
Queenstown and Mannapouri (Doubtful
Sound), to the wild and windy Catlins in
the far south, the birdlife rich Otago
peninsula and finishing at the historic
Dunedin.
Welcome
Our visit to New Zealand South Island took
us through fertile, green beautiful lands with
spectacular scenery, especially in the
mountains and sea inlets known as Sounds.
Our South Seas voyage was a fascinating mix
of islands all the way from the northern Bay
of Islands of New Zealand to Papua New
Guinea, Melanesia.
A brief history of New
Zealand
New Zealand is a small country, similar
in size to Great Britain or Japan but with
a population of only 4 million people
(only 1 million in South Island) it’s
uncrowded. Māori were the first to
arrive in New Zealand, journeying in
canoes from Hawaiki about 1,000 years
ago.
A Dutchman, Abel Tasman, was the first
European to sight the country but it was
the British who made New Zealand part
of their empire.
In 1840, the Treaty of Waitangi was
signed; it ws an agreement between the
British Crown and Maori. It established
British law in New Zealand and is
considered New Zealand’s founding
document and an important part of the
country's history.
Click to enlarge