A Rotorua woman described as the "queen" of her family considers herself lucky to be celebrating 108 years of life.
Ella Wilson has lived through pandemics, war and has outlived two of her children - but says she is "blessed in more ways than one".
The resident of Bupa's TheGardens Care Home was born on June 28 in 1914.
"I am lucky enough to feel very comfortable. It's a blessing," she told the Rotorua Daily Post at a high tea held in her honour at the home yesterday .
Residents enjoyed live music while drinking tea and eating cake from fine china.
It followed an early birthday lunch at Urbano Bistro on Saturday with about 30 family and friends who travelled from Auckland, Tauranga and Wellington.
Wilson said the lunch was "just wonderful".
"I cannot describe that. They were just lovely, everything there was lovely. And everybody seemed to be enjoying themselves," she said.
And she said the secret to living a long life was "to appreciate every day as it comes".
"Today everything is so fast or quick - they don't have time to stop and think. And every job they do is automatic. We did everything manually, and if we couldn't do it - our neighbour would help us. I think that was the secret - and you have no idea how happy we were," she said.
Wilson lost her mother to the Spanish flu epidemic at the age of four and was then separated from her father and four brothers.
"I was born in a very hard time, but we were happy. We had very little money, but we were very happy. We appreciated every little thing we got."
In December she told the Rotorua Daily Post she still remembered a truck filled with bodies coming to pick up her mother after she had passed.
"Dad went off to work and when he came home his wife had gone."
She was then briefly taken to a care home with one of her brothers before being sent to live with relatives.
Despite the struggles she remembers most of her childhood fondly – having "free fun" racing hand-built cars, playing sport and digging caves.