|
| | **IMPORTANT NOTE: The information below
is NOT intended to be complete, but rather is selective,
opinionated, and reflects our own particular experience at the
time.**
Cruising Notes on New Zealand
Click on the topic you want, or scroll down
for all topics.
Port Notes
Cruising in New
Zealand
Entry Information
General Information
Whangarei
Auckland Area,
including Gulf Harbour
Marinas in the
general Auckland area
Shopping in
the Auckland/Gulf Harbour area
Our Top 10 Land
Sightseeing Destinations
Vendors We Like
Port Notes
Cruising in New Zealand
 | NZ Cruising Guides
 | Northland Coast Boaties
Atlas, by David Thatcher, 1st ed. 2000. Published by Captain
Teach Press, Auckland. Excellent cruising guide, with accurate
chartlets, weather info, and radio info. Covers all anchorages,
but has no foreign entry info. |
 | The Hauraki Gulf
Boaties Atlas, by David Thatcher, 1st ed. 2000. Published by
Captain Teach Press, Auckland. Excellent cruising guide of the
many beautiful anchorages in the Hauraki Gulf (Whangaparaoa to
Coromandel). No foreign entry info. |
 |
The Boaties Book, yearly
editions. Published by the Auckland
Yacht and Boating Association, PO Box 2415, Auckland, New Zealand;
649-302-2030. This useful little pamphlet covers the Auckland
area, including full details on tides, yachting events, clubs, and marinas. |
 | Destination New Zealand,
edited by Graham Brice, 2d ed. 1995. Published by Destination NZ,
PO Box 236, Whangarei, New Zealand; 649-438-9250. Covers foreign entry
procedures and has much useful information on the ports of entry. |
 | Coastal Cruising Handbook,
8th (Millennium) ed. 1998. Published by Royal Akarana Yacht Club,
PO Box 42-004, Orakei, Auckland 5, New Zealand; 649-524-9945.
Covers all anchorages in the best cruising grounds of the North Island --
from Three Kings Island at northern tip, down the eastern coast and
islands, past Auckland and the Bay of Plenty, to Cape Kidnappers.
Exhaustive text listings, but no illustrations. Does not cover
foreign entry. |
 | I received an email giving
the following info: The New Zealand
marine Radio Handbook is an essential guide to marine radio stations in
this area, and especially useful for cruisers. I would be grateful if
you could add a link on your website: http://www.marine-radio.co.nz.
Many thanks, John A. john@marine-radio.co.nz |
|
 | Charts
 | NZ Charts: Charts of NZ published
in New Zealand (and available at Bluewater
Books and Charts) are
complete and significantly less expensive than DMA or British Admiralty
charts of the area. For a list of the NZ charts
we have on board, click here. |
 | Mail Order: For
the very best price, order
NZ charts and cruising guides directly from Boat Books (011-649-358-5691) or Trans-Pacific
(011-649-303-1459), both in Auckland. |
|
 | Weather & Radio
Information
 |
Local Weather Forecasts:
Weather conditions and forecast are broadcast round the clock on VHF 20
and 21
for Auckland area. Specialized broadcasts elsewhere are announced
on Channel 16. |
 |
Bob McDavitt and
Met-Service: Weather guru for the South Pacific is Bob
McDavitt, of New Zealand's national weather service, Met-Service.
Bob issues a free weekly "weathergram" via email to those who
sign up. For US$50, Bob will email you a detailed, personalized
5-day weather forecast for your passage. Once your credit card
details are on file, you can also get a quick answer to a weather
question en route with his "5 minute $10" service. Contact him at
649-377-4831; fax 649-307-5993; email mcdavitt@met.co.nz. |
 | Mariner's Met-Pack:
An invaluable guide to understanding weather in the South Pacific
region is Bob McDavitt's spiral-bound book, Mariners Met Pack,
from New Zealand's national weather service. Published by Captain
Teach Press, Auckland, and available from Boat Books (011-649-358-5691) or Trans-Pacific
(011-649-303-1459), both in Auckland. |
 | Russell Radio:
Des Renner at Russell Radio (phone and fax 649-402-7574) runs a great check-in system and regular weather
reporting for yachts on passage to and from New Zealand. Des
requests completion of a pre-passage registration
form and a membership fee of NZ$30 (US$12.60).
| Frequency |
Time (Local NZ) |
| 4445 |
0730-0900; 1900-2030 |
| 12353 |
0915-0930; 1600-1630 |
| 12359 |
0830-0915; 1630-1645 |
|
 | SSB Nets: As of
April 2001, cruiser-controlled nets are running daily for the NZ area on
frequencies 12365 at 1900 UTC; 8131 at 0800 UTC; and 8131 at 2100 UTC.
The Coconut Milk Run net from Tonga/Fiji to New Zealand is usually on 12365 at
1900 UTC. For Hams, the Pacific Seafarer's Net has roll call on 14.313
USB at 1525 UTC. If you check in there on
passage, they will post your position daily on their website for friends
and relatives to follow. |
 | Website Weather: New
Zealand; Fiji; Australia. |
|
Entry Information: Current as of March 2001
 | Ports of Entry, North Island:
Official North Island ports of entry are Auckland,
Whangarei, Tauranga
Bridge, and Opua (Bay
of Islands).
Most enter in Opua. We entered at Whangarei
quickly and easily (see details below under "Whangarei"). |
 |
Customs: New
Zealand Customs will issue a "Temporary Yacht
Importation" upon arrival, good for one year. Renew by
applying in writing to Mr. Jeff Bird, New
Zealand Customs Service, P.O. Box 29, Auckland. Renewal will usually
be granted in the case of ongoing repairs or boat re-fit. It is
helpful to attach basic documentation of the ongoing work. Telephone:
649-359-6633. |
 | Immigration: New
Zealand Immigration will issue USA & Canadian
citizens automatic visa and permit on arrival, good for 1 year. It is possible to renew
for an extra year (or more), but difficult to do in the very busy and cruiser-inundated
Auckland office of NZ Immigration. Instead, during any travel south,
stop in at the friendly office in Hamilton. Renewal was granted to us for a
combination of factors (weather conditions, imminent cyclone season, safety issues,
ongoing boat repairs, etc.) that argued against our leaving until the next
proper weather cycle, 9 months from our original expiration
Take passport, boat papers (incl NZ documents), a note from your marina
about your ongoing boat work, proof of financial condition
(bank statement, credit cards), and 2 visa photos for each crew member.
It took us about 10 minutes to get our extension in Hamilton. |
 | MAF (Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry):
On arrival, MAF
will confiscate all of your fresh fruit & veg, popcorn, growing plants, honey, eggs and egg cartons,
thawed meat, straw products, shells, genetically engineered products.
Straw and shells will be treated and returned. Canned meat is generally
OK to keep. Frozen, vacuum-packed meat from Venezuela was not confiscated from
us, but we have been told that cruisers who cleared in at Opua were required
to surrender all fresh and frozen meat, raw and cooked. |
 | Firearms: Cruisers must surrender firearms to local police upon entry
for safekeeping until departure. EXCEPTION FOR RIFLES & SHOTGUNS: Apply for
a Tourist Firearm
License at most major regional police stations (Auckland Central is 649-379-4240) or at the Auckland airport. Show passport
& descriptions of gun and ammunition; then show the license to
retrieve your firearms and keep them on boat for the duration of your stay.
With the license you may also buy firearms and ammunition in NZ. The license
does not apply to handguns, which must be surrendered until departure. |
 |
GST (Goods & Services
Tax): Make many copies of your Temporary
Yacht Importation document, because by giving one to a marine vendor from
whom you buy equipment to be installed on the boat, you save the 12.5% Goods
and Services Tax (GST). Failure to check out of NZ and leave its
waters before the Temporary Yacht Importation expires results in being
charged GST on the boat's hull value, as reported to customs upon
entry. As of this writing, it is
not possible to apply for reimbursement of paid GST upon departure, as one would
do in the EC. |
General Information
 | Telephone
 | Telephone from USA to NZ: 011 + 64 (country code) + (area
digit) + number. For example, Auckland's area code is 9, so Auckland numbers
are 011-649-xxx-xxxx. |
 | Telephone inside NZ: 0 + area code + number. For example, Auckland's area code is 9, so Auckland
numbers are 09-xxx-xxxx. |
 | Cell phones: Cheap and easy to buy
"pre-pay" mobile with no contract. Time is renewable by
credit card over the phone, or by buying "pre-pay" cards at post
shops & elsewhere. The pre-pay phones are good only in New
Zealand. Although you may hear otherwise, it is far more expensive to
alter the chip to make the phone work in Australia than just to buy another
one there. |
 | Long Distance Phone: Phone cards,
available at post shops, come with a number that you can punch in from any
phone. A particularly good bargain long-distance phone card is Ztalk
(Zed-talk), 0500-6968-6968. For an ATT direct line to the USA, dial 000-911. |
|
 | Internet & Email:
 | NZ Internet Service Providers: From
least expensive to most, here are some local ISPs: Kiwinet
(021-1874913 or nigel@kiwinet.co.nz); Ihug
(0800-438-448, 09-358-5067); and Xtra
(0800-783-782). Cost is about $US10/month for unlimited access. The advantage to using
a local provider is, of course, full Internet access with your laptop via
a local phone call. Most marinas offer telephone lines at the
dock. |
 | Internet Cafes & hook-ups:
 | Whangarei: Internet cafe & post
shop on second floor of white shopping "mall" on the quay in
Town Basin. |
 | Gulf Harbour: Ripples Cafe allows use
of its computer at an hourly charge. Kiwinet is located at 39
Cascaden Road
, Shangri-La Gardens. Whangaparaoa Library at the Plaza
has one terminal for hire. For laptop hookup, GH marina
office offers use of a phone line for about a quarter per
call. Phone lines are available at the dock. Phone plug adapters
are available at electrical stores such as Dick
Smith. |
 | Auckland: About every 4 blocks,
including in the IMAX Theatre complex. |
|
|
 | Money
 | Exchange Rate: From November 1999 to April
2001, the exchange rate has
fluctuated from .46 to .40. In other words, US$1 = between NZ$2.17
and 2.50. Since most services and retail goods cost on their face
about the same in NZ as in the USA, an American dollar buys about twice what it would at home. |
 | Banking: Opening a checking account is
handy given the length of time most cruisers stay. Banks will not
accept checks in American dollars, though, so you must either wire money
in or deposit currency. Ask for an "EFTPOS" (Electronic
FInancial Transaction at Point of Sale) card, which
is a debit card good at virtually all stores and ATM machines. Banks that seem to have a lot of branches are Bank of New
Zealand and WestPac. |
|
 | Dock Electricity: Most US "110/220" boats require
a step-down
transformer to pass electrical inspection at NZ marinas. Electricity is
240v, 50hz. |
 | Boat Work: New Zealand is an excellent place for
re-fits, repairs, and modifications -- far better than Florida or Trinidad,
in our experience. The work is top class and
relatively inexpensive in comparison. All equipment, parts and
spares are readily available. |
 | Television: New Zealand uses the
"PAL" television system, whereas the American system is called
"NTSC." Neither system is compatible with the other.
In other words, an American TV will not receive network or cable NZ
television, and an American VCR will not play NZ videos.
"Multi-system" TVs and VCRs that play both systems are available in
New Zealand and Canada, or by mail order in the USA. Radio
Shack sells a converter that can turn an American TV and VCR into a
multi-system. |
 | Cruising & Travel Generally:
 | North Island: The scattered islands off
the coast of the North
Island of NZ, and particularly the Bay of Islands, have many lovely anchorages for
cruising. Near mainland Auckland, however, marinas are the norm for a
variety of reasons, including deep water, major tidal surge, regulations
prohibiting anchored liveaboards, and the desire of most cruisers to do
significant boat work and land travel (see note on Auckland marinas below). |
 | South Island: On the South Island, there are
few well-protected anchorages or
marinas, except in the big ports (Christchurch, Dunedin, Marlborough Sound),
and the weather is often . . . well, rotten. It is said to be extremely rewarding to take the boat to the South Island, but
generally -- despite several glorious and unique anchorages -- more of a challenge than a pleasure.
Accordingly, many cruisers leave the boat
in a North Island marina and see the South Island by land travel. Most of the best
parts are inland anyway. The car ferry from
Wellington to the South Island offers large discounts for advance booking;
NZ Tranz-Rail offers special passes, as well. Campervans and motor homes
are cheap and plentiful. We
backpacked several of the spectacular, multi-day bush-walking tracks on the
South Island (contact the Department of Conservation for info), and it made a nice
change from water activities. |
 | Holidays: During school holidays, expect
virtually every anchorage on the North Island to be completely full with no
room left to anchor, short of rafting. Kiwi families
understandably love to cruise their spectacular country. At
non-holiday periods, the anchorages become available again, and many are
beautifully deserted. |
|
 | Food & Provisioning:
 | Food: We particularly enjoy NZ dairy products (fabulous cheeses and
ice cream), lamb, green mussels, South Island salmon, "Lisa's
Hummous," Indian food, and Thai food. Mexican food lovers,
though, are completely out of luck. We keep trying just one more Mexican
restaurant, and it always breaks our hearts. Major Warning: they make
margaritas here with lemon juice (instead of lime) and no sugar.
Grocery stores stock most American items, or a tasty alternative, and the
fruit and veg are superb. Paper and plastic products (trash bags, paper towels, etc.) are available at low cost.
As of this writing, however, there is no Costco or similar store in the
Auckland area. The closest substitutes are the Pak-n-Save in Albany
for food, and the Warehouse in Whangaparaoa for non-food provisions.
One More Warning: all hamburgers and sandwiches come with buttered bread and
beets on
them unless you specify otherwise. |
 | Wine: New Zealand makes world-class and
under-priced white wines. For award-winning chardonnays, expect to
stock up at about US$8 per bottle. Our favorite
chardonnays: Church Road
reserve,
Villa Maria reserve, Te Awa, Nautilus, Vidal, Mission. Our favorite sparkling wine: Pelorus. Our
favorite bargain chardonnays: Delegats reserve, Nobilio. Even more
award-winning and less expensive are the sauvignon blancs. Wine & food festivals
abound, notably in the Hawkes Bay
and Marlborough
regions, in January and February. If you drink
red, however, you're much better off with a Shiraz
from Australia. |
|
 | Tipping: Tipping is unusual at restaurants
(except in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch) and downright discouraged
at cafes. Waiters have chased after us to give us our money
back. To reward fabulous, once-in-a-lifetime service, NZ$5 is
appropriate. Tipping is unheard of for taxis, hair stylists, porters,
etc., except in the 3 largest cities, and then only downtown. Many
Kiwis are actually offended if you try to tip them so when in doubt, don't. |
 | Automobiles: Like most
voyagers we know, we bought a used car on arrival in NZ and sold it upon departure. There are many auction houses (e.g., Hammer,
579-2344; Turners, 09-438-4765; Claphams, 09-438-1592) and car fairs.
Also, check newspaper, marina bulletin boards, and local garages.
Perfectly fine cars go for US$600 to $3500. It is possible at
dealerships to get a nicer used car with guaranteed buyback at a negotiable
percentage of the purchase price. Cheapest insurance is at the NZ
Automobile Association (0800-117-888), which also offers roadside
assistance, or Bank
of New Zealand. It is OK to use one's home or international
driver's license for 2 years; then one must apply for an NZ license.
Drive on the left. Don't speed (hidden cameras, big fines).
Driving without a license (even if you have one but left it at home) is said
to result in automatic impounding of the car for 90 days. One final
note: Kiwi drivers are truly . . . brave.
|
Whangarei Port Notes
 | River Approach: Vessels with up to an 8-foot
draft can safely navigate the Whangarei River, but only at half tide or
above. (Be sure to go in and
out on a rising tide.) The bottom is generally mud. There are
nice anchorages at the mouth of the river and at intervals all the way up to
Town Basin. The channel is well-marked, with one exception. At
one particular spot, between the Customs dock and Town Basin, at the bend
just past Kissing Point Marina, STAY TO PORT. Hug that port-side
bank. The markers there erroneously appear as if one can cut the
corner. Don't -- it's a shallow mud flat to starboard, and many
boats (not us, thank goodness, as we were warned) go aground every
year. The channel is well dredged all the way up the river,
but the depth immediately rises to nothing at the channel's edges.
Cut the corners anywhere at your peril. |
 | Customs Dock (S 35°44.83', E 174°20.93):
Customs asks that you call ahead on VHF Channel 64 or 16 to let them know
you are coming. The customs dock is a small, decrepit wooden dock to
port, just past the commercial docking area. There is a large sign,
which has full instructions on it, but it faces sideways and is not
visible until you are abeam. Prepare to shoo seabirds away.
Customs, Immigration, and MAF will visit the boat; and they are quick,
efficient, tolerant, and friendly. See above for Entry Notes.
NOTE AS OF JUNE 2001: Opua and Whangarei now share just one customs
official, who travels the two-hour's drive back and forth. We do not
know whether this arrangement is temporary or permanent. If you are
checking in at Whangarei, you should probably telephone or fax ahead from
the departure port to arrange for entry, unless you don't mind waiting on
arrival. |
 | Town Basin Marina:
Past the customs dock, about 20 minutes further up the river, is the very
charming Town Basin Marina. Call ahead on VHF Channel 64 to make
sure there is space and to get instructions where to tie up on
arrival. There is room to do a full reconnoitering by passing up the
office and restaurants down to the very end of the wharf and then making a
U-turn to return. Don't tie up at the low dock in front of the
office without prior permission, as that is the water taxi area.
Options are to "parallel park" between two pylons (and use the
dinghy to come ashore); to raft alongside the main wharf; or to take a
slip on the starboard side of the basin (and walk a few minutes back
across to the main wharf). We rafted 3-deep at the main wharf very
comfortably, except that with our 7.5' draft we rested lightly on the soft
mud bottom at low tide -- no particular problem. Slips have water
and electricity; the main wharf has water hook-ups only; pylons have
neither. All normal facilities, including fuel, are available. |
 | Town Basin: Town Basin itself is a darling,
recently renovated wharf area, with sidewalk cafes, shops, galleries,
strolling townsfolk, and a clock museum. It is a short walk across
the street to downtown Whangarei and excellent shopping, provisioning, and
services. Within easy walking distance on the other side of the basin is an indoor swimming pool
with spa. |
 | Our Opinion: We really, really enjoyed
Whangarei and Town Basin. Clearing in was dead easy here, as opposed
to accounts we have had from some of those who entered in Opua.
Overall, it is definitely worth the minor hassle of navigating the
river. (But see NOTE AS OF JUNE 2001 above.) While here, if you have bought or rented a car, it is a very
short hop to drive west to New Zealand's main Kauri Forest for trees the
likes of which we had never seen or even imagined. |
Auckland Area & Gulf Harbour Port Notes
 | Gulf Harbour Marina (S 36°37.41, E 174°47.26):
On the Whangaparaoa Peninsula just north of Auckland, Gulf Harbour Marina is new,
extremely nice,
well-run, and offers excellent value. Call ahead on VHF Channel 73 for
arrival instructions. The marina has floating docks and provides all
lines. All normal facilities, including fuel, are available.
Only overseas yachties are allowed to live aboard. There is a
"big boat" marina extension across the basin to accommodate any
size vessel, but the area is isolated from all the facilities; and A-Dock
and B-Dock in the main marina take up to 60-footers just fine. Many of
the slips are privately owned and only managed by the marina. There is
24-hour security (not that it seems necessary). Office staff are very
helpful. Our dockmaster, Saint Paul, seems always to be at hand when
needed and notices the smallest change or problem with one's boat or
lines. Although we had never left the boat in the water as much as
overnight before, we left it here for weeks at a time with no concerns. |
Electricity, water (free), and telephone are available to
the slips. The prevailing wind is southwest, but clocks around to the
north and northeast upon arrival of a low-pressure system. It can get
quite windy in the marina basin, but unlike most other Auckland area marinas, there is no surge.
Gulf Harbour is beautiful. Although the marina is surrounded by country-club suburban development, the natural scenery is lush and gorgeous. The Auckland skyline is
visible in the distance. Several beaches and a large
regional park with great hikes are within walking distance. America's Cup racing is visible with
binoculars from the jetty. Local shopping and restaurants are good but
require a car, as the marina is about 3-4 miles from the main village.
Within walking distance are a small food shop and a few restaurants, including
the great little marina social-center cafe and bar "Ripples."
Also within walking distance are a hotel and country club, with 18-hole golf
course. At the main village, Whangaparaoa, are movie theatres, a great
health club, and a shopping mall with good supermarket. At Manly, a
small village slightly nearer the marina, are several excellent restaurants, a
superb yacht-friendly butcher, and a tennis
club.
The boatyard is first-class, with a 135-ton lift, large new
paint shed, good facilities, and excellent management. Every marine service is available, and
all Auckland marine vendors will deliver goods and send workers here.
Our Opinion: Best marina in the world we have
seen so far.
 | Note on Auckland-Area Marinas
Generally: For long-term stays, marinas
are excellent value in NZ. In the Auckland mainland area, no suitable
anchorages are available (deep water, bad surge, restricted areas, no
liveaboards allowed, etc.). Accordingly, most cruisers -- even the purest purists --
pick a marina as home base. Many slips
are privately owned, and bargain prices may be had by checking the newspapers
before contacting marina management. Here is a list of the most popular
marinas in the Auckland area. To our knowledge, the majority of
cruisers who stay in the Auckland area usually choose either Gulf Harbour or
Tauranga Bridge. |
| Marina |
Location |
Contact |
Notes |
| Gulf Harbour |
Whangaparaoa Peninsula, north of Auckland |
Tom Warren, 649-424-6200; fax
424-0703; VHF ch 73;
tom@gulf-harbour.co.nz |
We docked our boat here for 18
months and loved this marina. See above text for details. 45 minutes by car or ferry to
Auckland city. 10 minutes by boat to America's Cup course.
20-min walk to Shakespear Nat'l Pk. Many, many cruisers. |
| Westhaven |
Auckland, near Harbour Bridge |
649-309-1352; fax 367-5477; VHF ch 13; info@westhaven.co.nz |
Cool urban place to be; expensive.
25-minute walk to food/supply shopping, so car recommended. Good
facilities, but getting older. Very few cruisers. |
| Hobson
West (America's Cup Village) |
Downtown Auckland |
Same as Westhaven |
Ultimately cool urban place to be, but really
expensive, many dock-gawkers, noisy. Run by Westhaven Marina. |
| Bayswater |
Devonport area, just across harbor from
Auckland |
649-446-1600; fax 446-1605; enquiry@bayswater.co.nz |
Mainly NZ boat owners. Strong tidal surge. Good local shopping.
Spectacular view. Auckland 20 min by dinghy in a flat calmr; 40
minutes by car. |
| Tauranga
Bridge |
Well south of Auckland, in Bay
of Plenty |
|
Least expensive. Darling town, good
local shopping. Many, many cruisers. 3-4 hours by car to downtown
Auckland. |
| West Park |
Hobsonville, on upper Waitemata,
past Auckland Harbour bridge. |
649-416-7447; fax 416-7925 |
Said to be excellent place to
haul and have major work done. 20 minutes to Auckland by car. |
| Half
Moon Bay |
Bucklands Beach, just south of
Auckland |
649-534-3139; fax 534-1035; info@hmbmarina.co.nz |
Minimum depth 2 meters inside
marina. Largest slip is 16 meters. We did not visit, so have
no details. |
 | Note on Shopping Areas Generally: In the 30-mile area
between Auckland and Gulf Harbour are numerous excellent shopping areas, listed
in the following table in
order of proximity to Gulf Harbour: |
| Area |
Location/Directions |
Notes |
| Gulf Harbour Marina |
Gulf Harbour (GH) |
Major marine vending area. Boatyard, chandlery, canvas, diesel,
electrics/mechanical, small food store, restaurants, bars, country club,
Internet access at Ripples |
| Manly Center |
Manly Village, west of GH on Whangaparaoa
Rd (5 min from GH) |
Village shopping: superb cruiser-friendly butcher,
ok bakery, fruit
stand, excellent Thai & Indian restaurants, pizza, stationery, video
rental, good hair salon; day spa, tennis club nearby |
| Whangaparaoa Plaza Center |
Whangaparaoa, west of GH on Whangaparaoa Rd
(10 min from GH) |
Mall with supermarket, pharmacy, movie theaters,
bowling, travel agent, post
shop, retail clothes & housewares, phone shop, kitchen shop, books, music,
sporting goods, Warehouse (sim to K-Mart), banks, library |
| Whangaparaoa town |
West & south of Plaza |
Laundry, liquor store, Placemakers discount
hardware, In Stitches embroidery, Leisure Center swimming pool &
health club (Stanmore Bay Rd) |
| Orewa City |
From GH, go north on Hwy 1 (20 min from GH). |
Village shopping: fabric, flowers, bulk
groceries, clothes, AA, fast food |
| Albany Mall |
From GH,
take Hwy 1 south, exit Oteha Bay (25 min from GH) |
Discount mall: Electrical, computer,
housewares, stationery, rugs, fast food, groceries, etc. |
| Tristan Road/Wairau Pk |
From GH, take Hwy 1 south; exit Tristan,
turn right on Tristan, then immediate left on Wairau Rd (30 min from GH) |
Major marine vendor area; many
authorized repair shops, dealers. Printer, dive shop, gun
shop, computer store. |
| Takapuna (high street & mall) |
Signposted off HIghway 1 south (40 min from
GH). |
Upscale retail shopping |
| Westhaven Area |
In Auckland, near bridge. From Gulf Harbour, take Hwy
1 south, exit Fanshaw, turn left on Beaumont.(45 min from GH) |
Major marine vendor area. All
possible services. |
| America's Cup Quay, Princes Wharf |
Auckland downtown |
Great restaurants, bars, museum, souvenirs |
| Victoria Mall |
Auckland -- big red-brick warehouse west of
Westhaven area |
Flea market, souvenirs |
| Ponsonby |
Auckland. From GH, south on Hwy 1;
exit Shelley at Harbour Bridge |
Great restaurants, upscale shops, galleries |
| Queen Street |
Auckland downtown |
Main Auckland retail shopping area, from
harbour west to Sky Tower area. |
 | Our Opinion on Marinas Generally: We wholeheartedly
recommend Gulf Harbour Marina and, if we were to go back to NZ, would
stay there again, no question. GH is the nicest, best-run marina
I've ever seen and still manages to keep their rates quite affordable. The boatyard, too, gave us nothing but pleasant
experiences. Some of our good friends who had major re-fits done in
New Zealand speak so glowingly of Westpark, too, (particularly "Touch of
Gloss" painters) and got such outstanding results there that I think if
I were completely re-building or re-fitting a boat in New Zealand, I would certainly
look at Westpark as well. For cruisers on a seriously tight budget,
Tauranga Bridge is the least expensive and a charming, yacht-friendly place to
be. |
Land Sightseeing Destinations
Although you can't go wrong anywhere in the
country, here are our top 10 sight-seeing destinations or trips in New Zealand, in no
particular order.
 |
Milford Track (and starting-point village
of Te Anau, and end-point Milford Sound) |
 |
Abel Tasman National Park (track, Abel
Tasman Lodge, beaches) |
 |
West coast of South Island by car to
Greymouth, then by Tranz-Alpine train to Christchurch |
 |
Christchurch (botanical gardens, events,
galleries) |
 |
Taupo/Rotorua area (Maori cultural shows,
thermal parks, Huka falls and jet-boat ride, trout lake) |
 |
Blenheim & the Marlborough wine country
(especially during Wine & Food Festival) |
 |
Hawkes Bay Wine Festival (including visit
to art deco city of Napier) |
 |
Coromandel (villages, scenery) |
 |
Auckland (America's Cup village, museums,
art gallery, Sky Tower, restaurants) |
 |
Bay of Islands generally, especially
Russell & Kerikeri |
 |
Queenstown (sports & scenery) |
 |
Kauri forests (near Dargaville, on west
coast of North Island) |
Yes, we know that's 12 destinations, not 10,
but we were unable to cut two.
Vendors We Like
Generally speaking, New Zealand has an unusually high standard
of services and products. Here are the area vendors that we
happen to have used and can recommend wholeheartedly.
| Type of Vendor |
Name |
Location |
Contact (phone prefix 011-649 from USA, or
09 in NZ) |
Notes |
| Bank |
Bank of New
Zealand |
Plaza, Whangaparaoa |
424-4891; fax 424-5897 |
Friendly service. Internet banking. |
| Butcher |
Manly Village Butchery |
Manly Village, near Gulf Harbour |
|
Will vacuum-pack & quick-freeze.
Organic beef, free-range chicken available. Cruiser-friendly.
EXCELLENT meat, compared to supermarket. |
| Canvas |
Fabric Magic |
Whangaparaoa |
Sue Reed, 424-4004 |
See Upholstery, below. |
| Gulf Harbour Canvas |
Gulf Harbour Marina |
Blair or Allan, 424-1219 |
|
| Carpentry |
Grant Symmans |
Gulf Harbour/Auckland |
476-4263; cell 025-275-0966 |
Marine carpenter; countertops, deck repairs. Great guy. |
| Mitchell Products |
Target road, off Tristan exit. Call for
directions; hard to find. |
443-0946 |
Makes unfinished cabinetry to your pattern or
measurements. No finishing or installation. Incredible value. |
| Carpeting |
Flooring First |
621 Whangaparaoa Rd, Whangaparaoa |
Keith, 424-1919; cell 025-769-204 |
Sales only, no marine installation. |
| Austin Flooring Contractors |
|
Bob Austin, 420-4122; cell 021-944-204 |
Marine installation. |
| Chandlery |
AES |
152 Beaumont, Westhaven, Auckland |
358-0910; fax 358-0912; david@aesnz.com |
Bargains. |
| Burnsco |
Gulf Harbour Marina; Westhaven |
|
GH shop is small, but can order in everything you
need & will run a tab. |
| Chart Copies |
Orewa Copy Center |
Orewa, just NW of GH |
|
Will copy charts for NZ$5 each (about
US$2.20) |
| Charts & Cruising Guides |
Trans-Pacific Marine |
Westhaven area, Auckland |
303-1459; fax 307-8170 |
Bigger. |
| Boat
Books |
Westhaven area, Auckland |
23B Westhaven Dr.; 359-5691; fax 358-5817; crew@boatbooks.co.nz |
Friendlier. |
| Dentist |
Bryce Cameron |
Red Beach (near Whangaparaoa) |
426-4437 |
Excellent dentist. |
| Dive Shop |
Dive
Centre Ltd. |
198 Wairau Road (just off Tristam Ave) |
Kevin Hoyle, 444-7698, dive.centre.ltd@xtra.co.nz |
Big shop, knowledgeable service. |
| Doctor |
Catherine Ripley |
Wade River Road, Whangaparaoa |
Family Doctors Clinic, 424-3001 |
Best in area. Also in same office is
Peter Hall, travel medicine specialist. |
| Electrical acc., computer gear |
Gamma Computers |
Tristan Rd exit off Hwy 1 |
444-3333 |
|
| Dick Smith stores |
Albany Mall, Auckland, Orewa (chain) |
(Orewa) 426-2007 |
We end up shopping here a lot. |
| Electronics, Hydraulics, Plumbing |
Lusty & Blundell |
Albany |
Grant Matthews, 415-8303; fax 415-8304 |
Raytheon, Jabsco dealer |
| Embroidery, logo |
In Stitches |
584 Whangaparaoa Rd, Whangaparaoa |
Michelle Whalan, 424-1262; fax 424-1268; institch@ihug.co.nz |
Will create logo or digitize yours; has caps,
t-shirts for embroidery; excellent service. Tell Michelle hi. |
| Firearms |
Adventure First |
Albany |
|
You need a tourist license to buy firearms in
NZ (see Entry Notes, above) |
| Health Club |
Leisure Center |
159 Brightside Rd., Stanmore Bay,
Whangaparaoa |
424-1914 |
Pool, gym, classes, massage, weights.
Nice facility. |
| Hull & deck waxing |
Pamperine Services |
Auckland area |
Stephen Ford, 817-6400; cell 025-938-579 |
Hand or machine. |
| Kayaks |
Kayak Direct |
Whangaparaoa |
Darryl Morgan, 817-3507; cell 025-761-170 |
Kayak factory. Will deliver.
Excellent value. |
| Liferaft Service |
Denray |
96 Kerwyn Ave., Greenmount, Auckland |
274-8080; fax 274-8787 |
|
| Marina & Boatyard |
Gulf
Harbour Marina |
Box 205, Whangaparaoa 1330 (40 min north of
Auckland city) |
Tom Warren, Michelle: 424-6200;
424-0703 fax; VHF ch 73; tom@gulf-harbour.co.nz |
Excellent haul-out facilities; 135-ton lift; all marina
services; boat builders; paint
shed; power, phone, water, fuel |
| Mechanical, Electrical |
Seaquip |
Gulf Harbour Marina |
John & Jan Lucas, 424-1260;
fax 424-1800; cell 021-772-137 |
Will also take care of boat while owners
travel |
| Transformer Specialties Ltd. |
199C Triangle Rd, Massey, Auckland |
Karl Canham, 833-7999; fax 832-5550; cell
025-745-880 |
Excellent value on custom step-down transformer, for
American boat to use dock power. |
| Painters |
Touch of Gloss |
West Park Marina, Hobsonville |
Dale Pennington, 416-5774; fax 416-7432; tog@iconz.co.nz |
This is not the same company as Gulf Harbour's
"Gloss Paints." |
| Pamperine Services |
Auckland area |
Stephen Ford, 817-6400; cell 025-938-579 |
Excellent, reliable bottom painter & hull
waxer.
Good value. |
| Refrigeration |
Fridgetech |
4A Bonita Ave., Stanmore Bay, Whangaparaoa |
Greg Knight, 424-1781; cell 025-749-565 |
Greg is really overbooked, but if you can
grab him, he does great work. |
| Rigger |
Barry Saunders |
Opua (Bay of Islands) |
402-6280; 025-415-971 |
Reputedly best in the country Book well
in advance. |
| Sails |
Doyle Sails |
Westhaven, Auckland |
Justin Ferris, 307-0799;
fax 379-2549 |
Caveat: After we had our sails
satisfactorily serviced here, we heard very bad reports from other
cruising boats. |
| Semco Products |
South Pacific Marine |
Westhaven |
Nick, 0800-117-767; 025-777-190 |
NZ distributor |
| Surveyor |
Mike Menzies |
Gulf Harbour Marina |
Natalie, 424-0833; cell 025-924-119; mmms@ihug.co.nz |
Knowledgeable and reliable. |
| Taxi & airport shuttle |
Hibiscus Shuttles |
21 Siesta Terrace, Army Bay (near Gulf
Harbour) |
Peter Couch, 424-4435; fax 424-4903; cell
021-618-154 |
Very reliable airport shuttle. Excellent for group
trips to Auckland, too. |
| Upholstery, Soft |
Fabric Magic |
Whangaparaoa |
Sue Reed, 424-4004 |
Will design and make custom bedspreads,
V-berth sheets, cushions, small canvas work, etc. Excellent work. |
| Watermaker Service |
General Marine Services |
Westhaven |
Jonathan Lunn, 309-6317 |
|
| Weather |
Metservice |
23B Westhaven Drive, Auckland |
Bob McDavitt, 377-4831; fax 307-5993; mcdavitt@met.co.nz |
Offers pre-passage forecasting service by
email (see weather section above) |
| Xaxero Marine
Software |
West Harbour, Auckland |
Jonathan Selby, 412-7580; fax 412-7579; jonathan@xaxero.com |
Originators of the Coretex weatherfax
software. |
| Woodwork |
Grant Symmans |
Gulf Harbour/Auckland |
476-4263; cell 025-275-0966 |
Full-service marine carpenter & boat
builder; countertops. Great guy. |
| Mitchell Products |
Target road, off Tristan exit. Call for
directions; hard to find.. |
443-0946 |
Makes unfinished cabinetry to your pattern or
measurements. No finishing or installation. Incredible value. |
| | |