Browse by Region

Latest news from the Media website

Sign up for email updates

  1. We will not share your email address with anyone or use it for any other purpose.
bottom

Did you
know?

 


Did you know?

Only in New Zealand

Bowled Over

Despite being a water-loving nation, more people die in New Zealand every year playing lawn bowls than scuba diving.

Sharp Tongue Williams

New Zealand linguist Harold Williams made it into the 'Guinness Book of Records' for his ability to speak fluently over 58 languages.

Sticky Situation

Two New Zealand students broke a Guinness World Record for making the world's largest tape ball. The ball's circumference was over 2.5m and weighed in at 53kg.

Animals Galore

Less than five percent of New Zealand's population is human, the rest are animals - one of the highest ratios of animals to humans in the world.

Big Readers

New Zealand has more bookshops per capita than any other country - one for every 7,500 people.

Spell That!

New Zealand boasts the world's longest place name: Taumatawhakatangi- hangakoauauotamatea- turipukakapikimaunga- horonukupokaiwhenuaki- tanatahu.

Sporting triumphs

Silver For The Cabinet

New Zealand's rugby team, the All Blacks won the first Rugby World Cup in 1987. New Zealand will play host to the 2011 Rugby World Cup.

Teeing Off

New Zealand has more golf courses per capita than any other country - 400 courses for four million people, approximately one for every 10,000 people.

The Jog-Father

New Zealand running great, Arthur Lydiard invented jogging - a training technique that saw his famous protégés Peter Snell and Murray Halberg win gold on the same day at the 1960 Rome Olympics.

Whistle Blower

New Zealand referee William Atack was first to use a whistle to stop a game of sport in 1884. While his contemporaries used their voices, Atack used a dog whistle to control the game.

City Of Sails

New Zealand's largest city, Auckland reputedly has more boats per capita than any other city in the world, earning it the nickname 'City of Sails'.

The natural world

Hot Enough To Fry An Egg

Frying Pan Lake near Rotorua is the world's largest hot water spring, with temperatures reaching 200˚C at its deepest point.

Real Life Mount Doom

New Zealand's Lake Taupo, was formed by the world's biggest recorded eruption in the last 75,000 years. The dust from the eruption was seen as far away as Rome and China.

Land Before Time

Curio Bay - in Southland, New Zealand - is one of the world's most extensive and least disturbed examples of a petrified forest, up to around 180 million years old.

Not In Our Backyard

New Zealand established itself as a nuclear free zone in 1985, refusing to allow nuclear powered or armed ships in its waters, and continues this stance today.

Sun, Sand And Surf

New Zealand's coastline boasts some of the world's most beautiful beaches. No part of New Zealand is more than 128km from the ocean.

Wonder Of The World

Tongariro National Park is the oldest national park in New Zealand. It has been acknowledged by UNESCO as one of 24 mixed cultural and natural World Heritage Sites.

Flora and fauna

Box Of Birds

The New Zealand kakapo is the world's largest, rarest and only flightless parrot; the kea is the world's only alpine parrot; the little blue is the world's smallest penguin.

Gentle Giant

The New Zealand giant weta is the world's heaviest insect, on average it weighs more than a sparrow, making it so heavy that it is unable to jump.

Royal Breeding Ground

Dunedin's royal albatross colony at Taiaroa Head, on the tip of the Otago Peninsula, is the only mainland breeding colony of albatross in the world.

Dinosaur Walking

The New Zealand tuatara is the oldest living genus of reptile in the world, and can be traced back 190 million years to dinosaur times.

Big Mama

The New Zealand kiwi is only bird in the world to have nostrils at the tip of its bill, and lays the largest egg relative to body size.

Water Baby

Hector's dolphin, found only off the coast of New Zealand, is the world's rarest and smallest dolphin. It is recognisable by the rounded dorsal fin.

Action and adventure

Human-sized Hamster Ball

New Zealand brothers Davis and Andrew Akers created the world's first Zorb, a unique adventure activity involving a giant plastic ball, a slope and speeds of up to 50km/h.

Ice Man

On 24 January 1895, New Zealand explorer Alexander von Tunzelmann was the first person to set foot on Antarctica, at Cape Adare.

James Bond In Jandals

New Zealand inventor, Alan Gibbs invented the first high-speed sports amphibian, the Aquada, which transforms from sportscar to speedboat in under 12 seconds.

King Of The World

New Zealand mountaineer, Sir Edmund Hillary was the first person to climb Mount Everest in 1953, alongside Sherpa Tenzing Norgay.

Original Daredevil

New Zealand entrepreneur and daredevil A J Hackett opened the world's first commercial bungy in 1988. The Nevis Highwire is the southern hemisphere's highest bungy.

Speed Demon

New Zealand farmer William Hamilton developed the world's first propellerless jetboat in 1953. He also invented the hay lift, an advanced air compressor and the water sprinkler.

Invention and innovation

Daughter Of The Skies

New Zealand aviator Jean Batten made the first return flight between Australia and England, and the first direct flight between England and New Zealand.

Kiwi Innovation

New Zealander Colin Murdoch invented the disposable syringe, tranquiliser dart gun and childproof medicine bottle, while Ernest Godward invented the rotary eggbeater, burglar proof windows and world's first spiral hairpin.

Girl Power

New Zealand was the first self-governing country in the world to grant women the vote in 1893. Women have held the country's key constitutional positions, including Prime Minister and Governor-General.

Scientist Supreme

New Zealand scientist Baron Ernest Rutherford was the first in the world to split the atom in 1919. He was awarded a Nobel Prize for his efforts in radioactivity.

Smooth Landing

New Zealand aviator Sir ‘Harry' Wigley created the first retractable skis for aircraft, and made the first snow landing on Tasman Glacier, the longest in the southern hemisphere.

An Eyeful

At 328m high, the Sky Tower in downtown Auckland is the tallest free-standing structure in the southern hemisphere, and offers 360deg views for more than 80km.