A tradition Maori greeting - the hongi By Chris Sisarich
A tradition Maori greeting - the hongi By Chris Sisarich
A tradition Maori greeting - the hongi By Chris Sisarich
The Weta Cave, created by famous NZ filmmaker Peter Jackson By Weta
The Weta Cave, created by famous NZ filmmaker Peter Jackson By Weta
The Weta Cave, created by famous NZ filmmaker Peter Jackson By Weta
New Zealander AJ Hackett invented the Bungy Jump By AJ Hackett
New Zealander AJ Hackett invented the Bungy Jump By AJ Hackett
New Zealander AJ Hackett invented the Bungy Jump By AJ Hackett
Kiwis love camping in the great outdoors By Ben Crawford
Kiwis love camping in the great outdoors By Ben Crawford
Kiwis love camping in the great outdoors By Ben Crawford
Rugby - New Zealand's national sport By Arno Gasteiger
Rugby - New Zealand's national sport By Arno Gasteiger
Rugby - New Zealand's national sport By Arno Gasteiger
For many Kiwis, farming is a way of life By Ben Crawford
For many Kiwis, farming is a way of life By Ben Crawford
For many Kiwis, farming is a way of life By Ben Crawford
Get friendly with the locals and join in for some beach volleyball fun By Chris McLennan
Get friendly with the locals and join in for some beach volleyball fun By Chris McLennan
Get friendly with the locals and join in for some beach volleyball fun By Chris McLennan
1 / 7
With a patchwork history of Māori, European, Pacific Island and Asian cultures, New Zealand has become a melting-pot population - but one with some uniting features that make it unique in the world.
Today, of the 4.4 million New Zealanders (informally known as Kiwis), approximately 69% are of European descent, 14.6% are indigenous Māori, 9.2% Asian and 6.9% non-Māori Pacific Islanders.
Geographically, over three-quarters of the population live in the North Island, with one-third of the total population living in Auckland. The other main cities of Wellington, Christchurch and Hamilton are where the majority of the remaining Kiwis dwell.
Over four hundred years before Christopher Columbus and the rest of Europe worried about falling off the edge of the world; Maori people voyaged thousands of miles across the vast unknown Pacific Ocean in small ocean-going canoes and became the first inhabitants of Aotearoa New Zealand. To this day, Maori culture is a core part of New Zealand’s national identity.
New Zealand’s European pioneers were also brave, rugged and independent. Before establishing farms and settlements, they had to first clear the land - a painstaking and sometimes dangerous activity. Their isolation and exposure to the elements forced these early New Zealanders to become hardy and multi-skilled.
This resourcefulness and ingenuity has greatly contributed to the New Zealand character. The same qualities can be seen today in the new pioneers - a generation of young Kiwi business executives, computer software builders, film-makers, fashion designers, and sportspeople making waves around the world.
Since before Sir Ernest Rutherford ‘split’ the atom early in the twentieth century, Kiwis have been discovering and inventing things. Many of these inventions have literally been created in a backyard. While frozen meat, the Hamilton Jet boat, and the bungy jump are probably our most famous Kiwi inventions, there are many others.
New Zealanders are also responsible for the tranquilliser gun, seismic ‘base’ isolators (rubber and lead blocks which minimise earthquake damage), electric fences, the fastest motorbike in the world, freezer vacuum pumps, stamp vending machines, wide-toothed shearing combs, and the electronic petrol pump - to name a few!
For the same reason that many visitors come to New Zealand, Kiwis have developed a passion for the outdoors and delight in activities that make the most of the spectacular landscape.
With so much coastline, it’s little wonder New Zealanders love the water and it’s reputed that over 15% of New Zealand families own their own boat. Respected as superior yacht designers, Kiwis continue to dominate on the world yachting, kayaking, windsurfing and rowing scene.
Hiking, camping, fishing, bush and beach walks are other popular outdoor pursuits. The more intrepid take to the mountains; following in the footsteps of perhaps the most adventurous Kiwi, Sir Edmund Hillary, who conquered Mount Everest, the world’s highest mountain, in 1953.
The two World Wars saw heavy casualties inflicted on the New Zealand male population. But it also saw loyalty to your friends and comrades — ‘mateship’ — become a prized social value. This quality is still seen on the sporting field today.
Rugby football is the most popular spectator sport in New Zealand, with the legendary All Blacks recently winning the Rugby World Cup. Though the sport has public school beginnings in England, in New Zealand, rugby is definitely the grass-roots sport of the ‘average bloke’.
As members of a unique and multicultural society, many Kiwis have wholeheartedly embraced urban living, café culture and an appreciation for new culinary tastes, fashion and the arts. Kiwis are as likely to visit an Asian restaurant or modern art gallery as they are to attend a local rugby game.
Whilst the lure of urban dwelling has ingrained itself on many, there is a sizeable rural population and farming is a major export earner. While the traditional exports of wool, meat and dairy products are still very strong, new products, including Cervena (New Zealand venison), flowers, fruit, biotechnology and wine are now also contributing greatly to our exports.
It suffices to say that getting to know New Zealand’s relaxed and friendly people will be one of the things you love most about your visit. Strike up conversations along your journey - a casual chat at a bar or restaurant or at a local market - it’s the best way to get insider knowledge on the area you’re visiting and you may even pick up the local Kiwi lingo and make new life-long friends!
We've created your account. But there's one remaining step before you can use it. Check your email inbox. Look for an email from travel@newzealand.com, and follow its instructions to activate your account.
If you haven't received the email within the next minute, look in your Spam or Junk Mail folder, just in case.Having trouble finding or using that email? Contact us at travel@newzealand.com.
You have items in your trip planner from the last time you signed in. What would you like to do with your trip planner?
Merge my trips
Combines your old and new trips into one.
Overwrite my previous trip
Overwrites your old trip and replaces it with your new trip.
Revert to previous trip
Deletes your new trip and reverts to your old trip.
Your login session has expired. Please login to continue with your trip planner.
You need to sign in to save your Trip for future visits. Sign in now