West Coast at a Glance
This West Coast
travel and tourism guide, featuring accommodations,
tours,
attractions,
events,
shopping and more,
will help you plan a successful visit to the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand.
A sparsely populated
and mostly wild landscape, the West Coast of New Zealand is a land of national
parks, with scenery, wildlife, and activities to spare. Along the Canterbury
border, Westland/Tai
Poutini National Park contains the Fox
and Franz
Josef Glaciers—only accessible by air tours and guided walks. In the
region’s north is Nelson
Lakes National Park and in the far south is Mount
Aspiring National Park, part of the Te
Wahipounamu-South West New Zealand World Heritage Area. These parks
encourage a range of activities such as tramping (hiking), fishing, caving
(spelunking), rafting, and kayaking.
A gold rush in
the 1880s helped to develop the West Coast’s largest town, Greymouth.
Local gold and coal mining history, as well as that of the timber industry,
is explained at attractions throughout the region.
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