Another great reason to live in New Zealand if you love surfing and other watersports is that nowhere in New Zealand is more than 120 km from the coast.
The Maori name for New Zealand is ‘Aotearoa’. It means “the land of the long white cloud”.
There are also no nuclear power stations in New Zealand.
Here’s a really good reason to visit New Zealand – there are no snakes in the country!.
The most popular New Zealand films include ‘Once were Warriors’, ‘The Whale Rider’, ‘The Piano’ and the ‘Lord of the Rings’ trilogy.
Notable New Zealand filmmakers include ‘The Piano’ director Jane Campion and Peter Jackson, who made King Kong and the ‘Lord of the Rings’ trilogy.
Dairy farmers produce a whopping 100 kg of butter and 65 kg of cheese each year, for each person who lives in New Zealand!.
New Zealand is also home to the world’s only flightless parrot, the Kakapo.
The Hector’s Dolphin, the world’s smallest marine dolphin, which grows to a maximum length of 1.5 metres, is found nowhere else in the world but in New Zealand waters.
New Zealand has won more Olympic gold medals per capita, than any other country.
New Zealand won the first ever Rugby World Cup, held in 1987.
Auckland also has the largest number of boats per capita than any other city in the world.
While Rugby remains the most popular spectator sport in New Zealand, golf is the most popular participation sport, with more golf courses in New Zealand per capita of population, than any other country in the world.
New Zealand is after all the very first country to greet each new day!
It’s no wonder New Zealanders have always been ahead with regards to things like inventions and politics….
Baron Ernest Rutherford, the first person in the world to split the atom in 1919, was also a New Zealander.
Sir Edmund Hillary, the first person to climb Mount Everest in 1953, was a New Zealander.
In 1893, New Zealand became the first country to give women the right to vote.
Although it is around the size of Japan, New Zealand’s population is just over four million, making it one of the world’s least populated countries.
The act of taking a location from an explorer’s country of origin, prefixing it with New, and assigning it to a place that scarcely resembles its namesake (Old Jersey is a sparsely.
New Zealanders love their cars! 2.5 million cars for 4 million people (including the kids) makes New Zealand’s car ownership rate one of the highest in the world. Where Is Old Zealand The map is littered with place names that are derived from older place names.
The world’s first commercial bungee jump was a 43 metre leap off the Kawarau Bridge in Queenstown in 1988.