Elisabeth Easther talks to the CEO of Tourism New Zealand.
My dad was a chaplain in the Air Force and mum was a primary school teacher so we lived in various places around New Zealand. Thinking back, it was a very privileged upbringing. We had a great home environment, great schools and we had lots of time to hang out together as a family and enjoy whatever was going on around the places we lived in. We had access to rivers, horses and team sports at Ohakea, Whenuapai was all about imaginative play in trees and paddocks on bikes and skateboards. I reckon as a kid your perspective is largely driven by your immediate environment.
I didn't travel abroad till I was in my early 20s and after a few trips to Australia, I followed my partner — now my wife — to the Netherlands where she'd gone to complete her law degree. That visit was about chasing the girl, rather than the exoticness of Amsterdam but I do remember thinking the place was nuts with bikes, trams, boats, canals, pedestrians all competing for space, and an endless supply of beer. I must credit my wife with giving me the travel bug. She's always been a real explorer and she's passed that on to me.
When we moved to the UK we both had incomes, we didn't have children and we made it our mission to travel extensively because it's so easy to hop on a plane and fly to Hungary, the Czech Republic, Scandinavia, Croatia or Egypt. The thing that stood out about Egypt was the sheer mass of people, the depth of history and the cultural artefacts that sit in their back garden. We even played a game of golf under the Pyramids of Giza.
You tee off away from them, then play back towards them with the Great Pyramid at the end of the 11th fairway — that was a surreal moment. Climbing 3000 steps to the top of Mt Sinai and watching the sunrise, that was mind-boggling too.