The Christmas celebration arrived with the early European settlers, with Dutch explorer Abel Tasman celebrating the first Christmas in New Zealand in 1642. Since then, it was slowly integrated into NZ and Maori culture to become the wonderful holiday that it is today.
The New Zealand Christmas tradition may have come from the Europeans and mainly the English but the Kiwi’s have made it their own by adding their own traditions.
A summer christmas
Many families retreat to their beach or river-side baches (holiday homes; or โcribsโ if youโre in the South Island), celebrate on the beach, or spend the day in their back yard with family and friends โ Christmas is a very social event in New Zealand.
Before the big day
Children enjoy opening advent calendars โ a calendar that has 25 windows as a countdown to Christmas. Starting on the first of December, one window is opened per day, and each window can contain a prize such as a piece of candy, chocolate or small toy.
kiwi christmas food
The most popular dessert is the sweet and easy to make pavlova. This luxurious treat was named after the famous Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova, who toured New Zealand in 1926. There has been a lot of disagreement between New Zealanders and Australians, arguing over which country the dessert belongs to. Luckily the dispute was resolved in 2010 with New Zealand claiming the title of the true inventors of the sweet treat.
Christmas day activities
- Attend a Christmas mass at a nearby place of worship
- Relax or swim at the beach
- Invite friends or family to a barbeque
- Sing someย Kiwi Christmas carols
- Play a game of New Zealandโs favourite summer sport- cricket
- Hike or walk through a local national park
- Celebrate under a pohutukawa tree
- Enjoy a game of beach volleyball, tennis or golf
- Take to the water for some sailing, water skiing, kayaking or fishing