"We went to Wales for a weekend where two perfect strangers fell in love."
Isaac then flew up to meet Miss Corr's parents but then had to return home to New Zealand so Miss Corr soon followed him here.
"Thankfully, he was waiting at the airport for me," she said.
Miss Corr grew up two-and-a-half miles out of a small village in the highlands of Scotland.
Tomintoul, which is said to be the highest village in the highlands of Scotland, had a population of 400 to 500 people.
"It's a tiny village, but as a part of the highlands it is very picturesque. You've got the big rolling hills and open skies."
The village was very small ... "one blink and you would miss it" and she was one of five in her primary school class, she said.
"People always criticise Scotland for its climate and weather but I think that is what gives it character and charisma because every season has different beauty in it.
"There are so many dramatic changes as the seasons change. Back home you have the most incredible colours in autumn and then in the winter everything is under a thick fluffy blanket of white snow.
"We do get summer. It is just only three or four weeks long. And Billy Connolly lives just over the hill, that's what we would say to you guys anyway, 30 miles away but that's just over the hill. I've been at parties with him and he opened up our adventure playground in the local village."
Mountain bike trails, skiing, snowboarding, hill walks, swimming in local rivers was what was on offer in her region of the world.
"I had never been in the ocean or been in the sea until I had come to New Zealand. I had never even felt waves against me."
The Glenlivet, where Miss Corr worked as a tourist guide had been on its foundations there since the early 19th century.
A common misconception with the distillery was it would take a lot of people to run it, she said.
"It only takes two men on a shift to keep the multi-million pound distillery running.
"Back in the day it was all man-powered but now it is all computerised.
"The guys there just flick switches and monitor things. That is what surprises people most. They ask how many people does it take to make all this whisky, which is shipped all over the world, but it's just two."
The whisky is also aged for a minimum of 12 years at the distillery, she said.
Near her home is one of Great Britain's biggest concerts. Rockness was popular among locals and tourists near Loch Ness, where it got its name.
Miss Corr said she had been up to Loch Ness but hadn't seen old Nessy herself.
"A lot of people 'have' but maybe, maybe they have just had a bit too much whisky."
Miss Corr has been in Tauranga since February and loves her new home.
"I've fallen in love with New Zealand. This is just the start and I feel like I'm starting my life now."