- KAYAKING:
Kayaking is the best way to go through some of the New Zealand’s most beautiful coastline
and there are many guided trips available in order to visit them. There are a few kayaking
spots available in north island such as Bay of Islands, Auckland’s Hauraki Gulf, the
Coromandel Peninsula. Through this kayaking, we will get a chance to visit many places such
as Marlborough Sounds and Abel Tasman National Park, along with a chance to visit paddle
along Maori waka. If you want to have some fun, then go kayking across various Lakes and
rivers of Newzealand. For some fresh water kayaking experience, try the Whanganui River,
which is one of the longest navigable waterways in the country. - JETBOATING, QWEENSTOWN:
Queenstown is known as the adventure capital of southern hemisphere. It is also the home
to the world’s first commercial jet boat tour. Are you all looking for some new water
adventures, then you can go for this. Just experience the beauty of jet boating in the Lake
Whakatipu. Hydro Attack’s semi-submersible sharks are another adventure to do and also
a world-first – a cross between both jet and torpedo, through which they hit by touching
speeds of 80kph, diving beneath the surface and breaching into the air. You all can also
experience the adrenaline-fueled fun as the jet boat skims the water’s surface at high
speed and fishtails into 360-degree spins. - EXPLORE ARTITECTURAL HISTORY IN HAWKE’S BAY:
The Hawke’s Bay cities of both Napier and Hastings have been rebuilt again in the new and
popular architectural styles of the day, as most of them were destroyed due to the earthquake
in 1931. They were rebuilt in the popular architectural styles of the day. They boasts about
some of the world’s best-preserved art deco and Spanish Mission architectural precincts.
Let me tell you all an interesting fact about NewZealand and i.e, Newzealand’s wine making
process was started in Hawke’s Bay in 1850’s. To be precise, we could say that the region’s
well-established vineyards and excellent winery restaurants are the best explored ones on two
wheels. - WHALES IN KAIKOURA:
Do you guys want to experience the life changing moment in new zealand, then you have to
visit Kaikoura, shortly known as the whale watching city of newzealand, where you can
waters filled with various dolphins and whales. Whale Watch is the leading New Zealand’s
only vessel-based whale watching company, who offers the tourists to encounter the world’s
largest toothed predator, the giant sperm whale in their natural environment during the whole
year. Each and every Whale Watch tour is a unique experience and worth watching as all the
sightings vary. Giant sperm whales are the actual stars of the whole show, where you can also
see the migrating humpback whales, pilot whales, blue whales and southern right whales. The
main attraction of the Kaikoura is the largest concentration and variety of seabirds on
mainland New Zealand including 13 species of albatross, 14 varieties of petrels and 7 types
of shearwater, e.t.c.
- AUCKLAND’S DIVERSITY:
Aukland is one of the most diverse city in the world in the terms of culture, with the fourth
highest foreign-born population. Auckland’s diversity, which exceeds many of the biggest
cities around the whole world, has its set of drawbacks and barriers but many researchers
said that this is all a part of the growing pains of a young and booming global city.
Robin Peace, associate professor of Massey university said that, ”Auckland is one of the most
ethnically diverse cities among the whole world, along with the lines of Toronto which is a
largest city. Because it is a gateway city for many people who come to New Zealand in the
form of migrants come to Auckland. People often come to places where there are many
people who speak the same language and have had a previous experience or reasons of
migrating to New Zealand. People in Aukland speak more than 160 languages, whereas
residents of New Zealand speak only one language.