The reason we don’t build big cross country rail networks and super highways is because they would be a stain on the landscape. The roads are quite windy in places because they follow the natural flow of the land. We like the aesthetic of the natural flow of the land. It takes longer to reach places which is good because, in NZ, the journey should be as beautiful as the destination.
Actually my friends grandpa told us that in the South Island they used the army to build roads and he said they paid them by the yard stick. They worked out the more bends and curves they put in the more they got paid. He said that's why in places where they could have pretty much gone straight there are many bends in the road.
I loved that video. I've lived in NZ for 10 years (from UK originally) and I love it so much. It was the best decision I ever made. One thing I like that was covered in the video is that everyone is fair and reasonable. Kiwis are straightforward down-to-earth people and they don't believe in making life difficult for each other. There is so much freedom here.
That's awesome to hear! Kiwi born, spent a few years in Vancouver. I Love your beautiful country!! Now reside in California. Just glad the Kings gave me some redemption for 94!!
Thanks for this. I think there is an element of complainers in New Zealand but we really need to be more grateful. You shine a light on us. Thank you for choosing Aotearoa as your home.
If people are complaining,they know more about what they are talking about,safety,not sure I would agree,can't trust cop,judges,lawyers,social development,inland revenue,social workers,sent qualified not all nzers not lock their doors,not everyone is friendly.
Agreeing with you Sonya. it's some of the ones who never been outside of new Zealand just love moaning. They are entitled and ungrateful. in my job out of over 60 people I spoke to 10 of those are moaners. Never happy no matter how hard you try to help. I've travelled and anyone who lives in this country should be grateful.
@@cooledcannon Not in my experience. People complain about a lot, especially those influenced by the American right-wing groups. I wasn't born here, so nationalism doesn't influence my opinion when I say that New Zealand is paradise. We have very few things to complain about. The price of housing is a legitimate concern ; outside of that, there really isn't anything to complain about.
As a maori and new zealand european girl from the Wellington area, I find the comparisons between both countries is so interesting. Never realized that the pros & cons are so unique and different. Absolutely love this video!
Two totally different ways of thinking... NZ philosophy : "The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few." US philosophy : "My needs are more important than the needs of the many." And that's what makes NZ a more compassionate country. And that's how we beat COVID-19.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders pray for me and my family of 5. 3 special needs children and everything in america is more focused on the rich and not like how new zealand is. we are gonna try to come there but it is so hard right now with the lockdown and needing a work visa..any tips?
First, we are a nation that values individual liberty It's enshrined in our constitution. It's not an accident that the country that values individual liberty the most is also the richest and the most powerful, and leads the world in science, technology, medicine, space, sports, entertainment..you name it. Secondly , you didn't beat anything. You only delayed the inevitable because of stupid politicians (we have them too)with your isolation and lockdowns and finally your politicians have come to the realization that it's not practical and Covid is something you have to live with, so they are opening up. The fact that their tourism based economy was taking a beating from lack of tourism may have had something to do with it.
I'm a NZ native (Maori) and Yes growing up we never wore shoes, our teachers were forever trying to get us to wear shoes, only wore shoes to play sport, no shoes no play.. Doors were never locked.. Camping under the stars were the norm.. Getting dinner from the 🌊 is a way life.
As a kiwi I really love how much independence parents give their children. It builds the kids immune system to get down and grubby. Also, I grew up in a tiny town called Shannon and we literally never ever locked our doors ever. Always feel so safe wherever I go.
It's changed so much over the years though which is such a shame! I'm so glad to be raising my children rural so they still have a fair bit of freedom but it was definitely safer when I was a child
I am a kiwi who travelled around a fair bit in my youth (the Great OE), but when it came to settling down and having my daughter, there was no place like home. I am glad that you feel so welcome and safe here. I slept last night not only with my front door unlocked, but wide open. lol
Omygoodness this speaks to my heart. I’m a born and raised New Zealander and have been living the North Carolina for the past 7 years with my four kids and American husband. Every month I cry to go home and I think we’ll start the process of coming back to New Zealand to raise our kids. My son struggles with school cause he’s so active and it’s rigid and I want them to feel free to explore and learn that way. It’s refreshing that I’m not alone in my experiences of being here compared to Nz
People First in NZ 13:28 Maori Whakatauki/Proverb (He aha te mea nui o te ao?) What is the most important thing in the world? (He tangata He Tangata He Tangata) It is the People, It is the people, It is the people. Many Maori values are imbedded in NZ culture, the concept of showing manakitanga or hospitality to guests or visitors is one of the pillars of Maori society. Where do you think you'll take your Whanau next?
I started watching videos of this kind because I wanted to know how bad things were in the USA but your videos have changed my mindset to make me appreciate my country more instead of thinking less of others, keep up the good work, proud to have you in our home
The US still has SO much to offer. It’s still the land of opportunity. 💯Also there’s a huge entrepreneurial spirit there that you don’t always find in other countries.
Hey im a kiwi. My parents live 5hrs north of me and I don't drive. In NZ we have the intercity bus, the interislander ferry and a train that goes through most of the North island. Also we have ferries that are able to get you to many places in Auckland. I can catch a ferry to Waiheke, Coromandel, Rangitoto and many other places. We do have the public transport to make up for not having a car and it's not as stressful and more comfortable than driving
Wow. It’s lovely to see that you are both so happy and settled here in New Zealand 🇳🇿 Welcome! :) I am a Kiwi and yes we have our problems like any other country but the positives certainly out way the negatives. We are a long way away from the rest of the world, but I do think we have it all here, so our need for travel to experience or get to see things such as snow, beaches, mountains, cities, forests is all in easy travel distance for all. I’ve travelled to most places around the world apart from the Asian countries, and lived in Australia for a few years and I personally think Australians and New Zealanders are so blessed to live in the part of the world. We have so much freedom and a stress free life here, we are not battling to get anything, not waiting for hours in lines, rushing on busy motorways, cramped on transport, getting out of the way on busy streets with people pushing you around. We are lucky to have the Maori culture ingrained in all of us as Kiwis and it is such a warm and welcoming culture. We share, we support one another, we care and help each other. The government looks after us and there is no reason to be homeless or have no where to turn to for help. This little hidden gem we call “Gods own” really is a very spiritual and sacred place and I feel so blessed to live here. All the best to you both and your families and I hope that your honeymoon period never stops, I don’t think it will :) x
Kia ora, Chantelle & Terra! Thanks for the reply!! It's great what you're doing especially geography for Americans! As well as spending time in Canada before moving to the U.S. it was such an adjustment. Seeing you guys I'm like YES, someone understands!! Hope Lower Hutt is treating you right!!
As a born and bred Kiwi it's super interesting learning about the differences between here and US. I am mostly online so a lot of my friends are from overseas (mostly US) and always remark on my accent and how different everything is, and I've been loving showing them my country and learning about theirs and it's so great to hear your own experiences! I'm really glad you're loving it here and I totally agree with the cons, prices for everything are ridiculous lately and it feels like it is only going to get dearer. As a former JAFA I can confirm you definitely need a car to get about, and even then the traffic is ludicrous. Every nation and corner of the world has its faults, and NZ is no different, but it's very much a safe paradise away from the chaos of the world, I love it here and I'm glad you guys do too. c:
As a kiwi I'm proud to be a kiwi in new Zealand and the most beautiful and one of a kind place I would never leave I appreciate my country we are laid back here 🇳🇿🇳🇿
Have to agree with most of what you said, looking at it from a Kiwi living in the USA after five years, to when I was there. Life is just so much easier in New Zealand . Kiwi from Virginia
But there must be something a lot better about the USA for you to stay there than return to New Zealand. My sister emigrated to the USA 30 something years ago and is also critical about life in the USA. But she hardly returns Aotearoa so again there must be a lot of pluses with living the American Dream.
@@tomhu1745 I am not being critical of life here in the USA, they are very different. I just prefer life in NZ especially for bring up children. Living in a country with fewer population is so much easier. The reason I came to the US, I was asked to come by my only child to live within his family, and after all my immediate family in NZ had passed. I was alone and it made sense. He has lived here over 20 years now and the opportunities he has had far outweigh what he would have had back in NZ. Like in everything, there is good and bad, it's really what is best for you.
Housing is very expensive relative to typical household incomes. A very recent govt. report confirmed that supermarket food is fairly expensive in New Zealand compared to other developed economies. Income taxes on modest incomes are higher, esp. for singles and childless couples.
Absolutely true to the word. As a Kiwi living abroad it just make me proud of who I am and where I come from. Thank you ladies for your complement and honesty.
I live in NZ, have travelled a lot and lived in China for several years.I love the freedom I grew up with. We would never lock our doors even when we went away for a holiday. We would bike around the rural roads for a whole day as 8 - 10 year olds or adventure down the back of the farm all day, and just come home for dinner. Nobody worried about us. I think this helped me to move to China at 55 years old. I think we just grew up with an adventurous spirit. Also we all helped out on the farm from a young age, so we are used to hard work, but also have the confidence we can try anything. I could drive a tractor at 10 and back a trailer at 11. Thanks for pointing out all the great things about our country. Its good for us to hear it. We call it Godszone!! Glad you got stuck here for covid. You got to find our more about us.
that was me too and my brother and friend ,we would do the same ..bike around alot ,go fishing or bike to the beach on a hot day etc ,our house wasnt locked either at night ,i miss my young years now im in my 50s as well
I agree with almost everything you both said. I've done my fair share of travelling and I think NZ is pretty special. I wouldn't want to live anywhere else.
Loved your video ladies. Great to get a US/CA opinion about the differences. As an Australian, where I feel very privileged to have been born, I can't help looking at NZ and wanting to live there. It's just a stunningly beautiful country, I don't think that's often fully appreciated. I'm not just talking about places like Milford Sound, but almost anywhere you look is beautiful. Even the lakes are bright blue! My family drove from Christchurch to Queenstown on a holiday and even just driving along the coast with those snow capped mountains in the distance was a treat and then to stop at places like Lake Tekapo, well, it was hard to believe the scenery. But probably the overwhelming thing, and you guys touched on it many times in your video, is the people and the culture. There's something about Kiwi culture ands vibe that is so attractive. Australia is very similar in culture but there is a difference. I feel that Kiwi's in general are how you described as 'real'. In Australia, people are friendly, but also a bit more competitive, a bit less likely to extend themselves for others or give up what they have for others and I think also Australian society is more class-defined. Enjoy the hell out of NZ ladies, you're onto something sweet eh?
You said it exactly right. The people here are what make it so attractive not just the scenery. People go out of their way to help you and it’s 100% genuine. You really feel loved and appreciate. I don’t feel as much racism like I do in other countries too which is so nice. (And I’ve visited a few to know this) New Zealand is a true example for the world to learn from.
Well, large things like expensive furniture and cars, not so much, but they explicitly declare that on the tags because GST included is the default otherwise.
Many years ago i lived in NZ & have thought about going back as I like the climate there, but the problem is the Rental prices is just too expensive to be viable to live there unless u have a good income or are financially well off.
@@gissyb1 just as expensive in small communities. Not only that, but many rental places are in deplorable condition. Law heavily weighed in favor of landlords.
@@jac3271 Ibe heard most of the regular houses has no insulation. So people freeze in them. Especially those on the South Island. It also says the heating expenses go was up. Then I've heard most heat and cook with gas and the lines are so bad and people don't know what to check for with gas leaks that many homes exploded from the heat or the cook stove.
I’m a kiwi born Aussie.. this is great commentary. NZ and Australia are great places to live... If you haven’t been to Gisborne, plan it. It is a gorgeous city, with beautiful beaches and rich culture.. my hometown.
Wow I didn't know it was so bad in the US. Glad you are so happy here - it is a lovely country. .... although I don't personally know of anyone who doesn't lock their front door to be honest. We always have locked our doors at night and when going out. The crime isn't too bad, but there is enough for most people to lock their homes and cars just in case.
Half a century or so ago nobody locked their doors because they had nothing worth pinching, not everyone had a car and what could you do with a car that everyone knew who it belonged to. But definitely lock everything today.
Informative video and nice editing 👍👍 BTW My school exam is starting from day after tomorrow, I am well prepared. You guys are lucky that you guys don't have exams like other students and also you guys are getting best education in life ( travelling ) from such a young age. Have a great day guys ☺☺ Love from India ❤❤❤
Canadian here. Loved the video. lived in NZL for 15 years. I definatel agree to your comments. An awesome and a beautiful country. People are easy going and friendly,. The best country on earth
Im a Kiwi living in the US (moving home next year) and i have had a lot of American friends tell me that the free healthcare system is bad because we get taxed higher. Honestly I left NZ when i was 17 so i never really payed attention to that type of thing, but i did work full time at the warehouse, and i never noticed a HUGE income tax compared to the US, it felt the same to me. Thank you for your video. Also one "con" that some people might have is that it's hard to get things shipped from overseas since NZ is at the bottom of the world. In America you can find and ship ANYTHING. In New Zealand it will cost you a fortune for shipping.
It's a con by the health insurance industry and the health professionals ,the Americans fall for . We pay a similar level of tax and do not need health insurance (another tax)
Generally, Kiwis pay slightly higher taxes than Americans... A difference that is utterly Obliterated when you realise that Americans pay for health insurance On Top Of That, while Kiwis don't. (And then the insurance companies pull every trick in the book to avoid and minimize payouts. For all people complain about ACC and "pre-existing" injuries that are nothing of the sort, it ain't got Nothing on US health insurance.)
The taxes are very similar, but calculated in many different ways in the States. You get better results in NZ, as the country doesn't invest a massive percentage of its taxes into defense, intelligence and law and order. That money here goes to education and healthcare. You will pay a similar amount of taxes here in NZ but save by not paying hardly anything for healthcare. Yes our petrol and food and rents are expensive and if your under that curve it really hurts. The food is cheap in America because it is grown on the backs of the undocumented.... ohhh I did not just say that.
@@paulprice1705 Well, we tried to stop those undocumented but, the lefties just keep bringing them in droves. If you are a kiwi then thank the Gods that you don't have a border with another country that is hemorrhaging millions of people into your country from a whole different continent.
I am a kiwi. My husband and I went on holiday for a couple of weeks and forgot to lock the front door. Everything was all right when we got back but we usually would not go away without locking up. But it does seem reasonably safe. Bare feet - we lived in the UK for a few years and had our first child there. When she began to walk I naturally made sure she had bare feet so she could get a better grip on the planet’s surface. The UK mothers said that if they saw a child with bare feet they would assume the family was extremely poor. They would not let their children go without shoes even inside the house and even though it meant that their toddlers would be able to walk more safely. I love walking on lawn and sand with bare feet. One of the cons of living in NZ which you really need to be here for a few years to realise can be a problem is that legislation/social change is often very speedy - no upper house to slow things down (we used to have one but abolished it in the early 1950s) and a lot of legislation is passed making changes before other similar countries. (It means they can study what works and doesn’t work. ) Because we are a small in population country and mostly fairly well-educated with no upper house it means that a lot of legislation/social change needs to be tweaked to get it to work well. I remember the change to decimal currency - NZ did it first and mistakes had to be ironed out, then Australia did it learning from NZs mistakes and finally the UK changed learning from Aus and NZ. I was living in each country on the first day of change and believe that NZers adapted better to the changes without the drama that occurred in the other two countries although they had fewer errors in their planning. Thank you for the interesting talk. I am always a little surprised at your view of NZ. There are international indicators that all goats can be called to account on but politicians in big countries have more pressure from the rich and powerful so the electorate is less able to call them to account.
@@karenhaag1048 yes, you’re right. Good pick up. I must have been thinking of the day they passed the legislation although I was in the three. Countries when they implemented it.
My family has been here for 10 generations Traveled the world We are not perfect We are still innocent Our isolation protects us This is Godzone and we must protect it Thankyou for your nice comments
When I was born there is a photo of me as a baby with 5 generations theres been 2 more gens since and I have photos of kids going back to 1878 in Dunedin, so there a couple more,Dunedin was first populated in 1848,so maybe not quite 10,but depends on which Great Aunt you talk to after a few Sherries.
Omg you're so right about not locking the front door! My parents would do that when I was growing up and in summer they would leave the front door wide open to let the night air come in lol...Our cars were also left unlock (sometimes with the keys in the ignition) and windows down..we never thought of anyone stealing the vehicles or coming in to the house..which sounds bizarre but it was just the norm! lol
I remember getting in trouble from my dad once FOR actually locking the car! Apprentlu inconvenienced him lol. There are a lot of things I don't love about nz but I do appreciate how relaxed and safe it is!
In my experience, there is about a 8km/h buffer for the speeds you are driving in NZ. Only during public holidays/long weekends they usually reduce the buffer to 4km/h over the posted speed limit. But it is always best to keep within the speed limit for safety reasons. There is no need to rush anywhere, if you know how long it will take to get to your destination, leave a little earlier so you can take it easy and relax. If you go to Aussie, their posted speed limits IS the limit. If you go over that speed they ticket you. However their posted signs are usually 10km/h above those in NZ. ie: Urban: NZ 50km/h, AU 60km/h. Motorways NZ 100km/h, AU 110km/h
Just a little thing; Aussie is a person/s living in Australia, not the country. We usually say OZ, or "Stralia" - if you have the accent - meaning country. Cheers mate. 😊
It's cheaper to fly between cities that it will cost to drive (vehicle running costs) and in the larger centers it is cheaper to hire a car than to use a cab from the airport. I travel for business. Christchurch: from the airport to the city return by taxi ~ $90 ; a rental car for the day $34 with full insurance or $10 without + fuel (Snap Rentals, Go Rentals)
Hi ladies. A good place to go and visit is Lake Waikaremoana up on the East coast out of Wairoa, north of Napier. A nice place to be away from everything. Good place to camp, go bush walking, fishing.
Another great video. I've just come from watching the video where you mentioned Kiwis adding "as" after some words...had a chuckle when you said "sweet as" @7:31 😂 Would love to hear what your children think of New Zealand!
Yeah the first time I heard someone say sweet as was in Nicaragua with a family we met there from Rotorua. It grows on you really fast. Our girls have really loved being here in NZ.
Looking at what is happening in America, is really sad. However I truly believe at their core, Americans are good people with compassion, kindness and a generous spirit. Where the absolute tragedy is has been the response from the last President who I struggle, on any level to call a leader and more particularly the toxic media that is more interested in power, their ratings, presenter egos and advertising revenue. What an absolute cluster.
I get the impression that living from pay cheque to pay cheque, never taking a holiday in case you lose your job, or of being fired on whim, under stress all the time gets to people in the USA in the end - I see a lot of Americans who seem to be wound up so so so tight. They all just need four weeks off every year.
Super grateful for this video I live in NC and have been sussing this topic for a long time but I honestly have no clue what it might be like. So again super grateful for the information hope to join you someday.
People in NZ is relax because they are entitle to mandatory vacation paid leave. In USA its luxury to have paid vacation leave. You should discuss the retirement/superfund of NZ workers towards retirement, maternity leave, long service leave and sick leave.
There really is no such thing as the "pros and cons" of moving to another country . You just have to accept the new country for what it is, and not compare it with the country you left behind.
Don’t tend to agree. Re the US... no national healthcare. No gun control, to the degree your kids have “Active Shooter” drills in schools, is definitely a con, for me. Personally, they are a game breaker if I was considering a move to the US. And that was before Donnyboy. Unfortunately, now that I’ve seen that a major segment of America find no fault with his lying, corruption, racism, bigotry, misogyny, nepotism.... the US is definitely a no-go area. So sad for decent Americans, such as these ladies here on this video... tainted by and forever marked with the Donnyboy stain.
@@rwags6848 totally agree. He made America the laughing stock of the world. Im wondering are we going to witness 21st centry version of the fall of Rome, and Britian? It just seems too divided and crazy to ever come back after the week of mass shootings. And really if u cant all be safe and equal in your own country, then how can u demand others behave to your version of democracy. BTW its not a true democracy as it has a senate which is a republic style of government and an amendment means its not the original version of a document. It has been changed, possible with time as it progressed. They really need to be better educated on their own government.
@@user1oooify Agreed with the 1st half... “get its shit together”. Unfortunately, racism and bigotry, a heightened belief of self-importance, a gun-centric society, a high level of gullibility, national healthcare = socialism, money rules all, corrupt and overtly partisan government .... are not short term fixes. In some perverse way, they should thank Drumph and the GOP for exposing the true America. At least the issues can now be openly addressed and plans made to resolve (maybe 🤔).
@@jjohnson2247 too many dangerous snakes and spiders! Though I’ve visited a couple of times from NZ and I do like Australia a lot and I think Aussies are very friendly, helpful and relaxed people too.
You will find (especially in Auckland) most of the green spaces is actually Maori Land and you cannot develop on it. The Iwi allow the public to use the space in payment the council must do the upkeep of lawns and gardening etc. loved the show.
I live in nz, born and raised here. You say that everyone here is nice and friendly but not everyone is. I work in a supermarket and I deal with rude, snobby, mean people almost every week. It was worse during the first and second lockdown. Not everyone went along with it, there were people who didn't listen or weren't cooperating with the rules. Yes NZ is a beautiful country but in my opinion I don't agree with some of the things you said. Like getting a speeding ticket when you were 2kms over the limit. Speed limits are there for a reason, it's so everyone else is safe. You may think its ridiculous but its actually what saves so many lives
They are of course comparing NZ with the US. When I lived there, someone in your service position wouldn't just face more of that behaviour everyday to the degree that it seems as semi normal, if you ever mildly pushed back, for instance saying "no need to be rude" or were even mildly sarcastic comment, more often than not, you would lose your job that day if the rude person complained. Employers back the rude customer almost every time, no matter the unreasonable behaviour.
Yes I agree with you. These two woman have made so many generalizations about New Zealand. Someone watching this from overseas who has not been here would have the impression that there is next to no crime here, that everyone is middle class or rich and everyone is happy and that the Government will look after everyone. But we know the reality is that there are hundreds of thousands if not millions of people in New Zealand are struggling.
Hi there! I'm an American looking into studying in NZ at the University of Otago! Thank you so much for making this video, it has really put me at ease. You are both right: what you see on the news isn't even half of what's actually going on here. There are places the government has given up on trying to help. I've lived here my whole life and it is getting worse. I can't go out at night without being scared for my life. I've never felt like I could call this place my home since I feel so out of place here. I hope to find that feeling elsewhere. I'm an African American female, but I've been told I "act white", my entire life. I'm not saying any of this for sympathy, I'm just sharing a bit of my story...but I'm so glad you both love NZ! Thank you again :)
Another thing that is different about NZ and the USA is that in New Zealand there is no security checks at the airport for domestic flights. Like in the USA for a domestic flight you have to go through TSA but here in New Zealand you go straight from check-in to the gate. There is no security checks for domestic flights.
I often recall the story of Eve Van Grafhorst, who as a baby growing up in Australia, suffered from haemophilia and contracted AIDS. In those early days of that pandemic, her and her family were treated atrociously, mercilessly hounded, ostracized by her community and Government authorities Eve who only 3 years old at the time was treated terribly. When a news program covered the situation was broadcast in New Zealand, some folk began raising money to bring them over. Jobs were found and they settled into Hastings. Eve turned out to be special girl, and became a willing participant in AIDS education, becoming a beloved person nationally until her death at the age of 11. There is a quiet compassion that runs through the veins of the country and the people genuinely care for the less fortunate. And it's something I miss living abroad.
Hii im watching from Austria and me and my BFF have been talking about movig to NZ to escape our toxic households and LET ME TELL YOU. This is literally all im looking for. I get it, its probably expensive and all that but as you said, u get more money so that shouldnt be an issue. I just finally want to have peace and i really really love the vibes new zealand gives. Like, you said its so laid back and so calm and nice and welcoming. THATS LITERALLY ALL IM LOOKING FOR OMG😭😭💕
I’m sure you’d love it but you’d miss Europe at the same time too. It’s definitely a very laid back and balanced lifestyle here. We’ll be releasing so many NZ videos so you’ll be able to see a really good overview of what it’s like. 😉
Noah, often people toss up the financial factors when comparing options but I think just about everyone either forgets or underestimates the 'cost' of things like stress, crime, safety etc. I'm not surprised that Chantelle and Tara have found that overall, the money pretty much balances out, but that's the just the $ side of things. Even if it was overall more expensive to live in NZ, when you factor in the true cost of stress, fear of safety, freedom to roam and explore, life is much less 'expensive' and much more satisfying and fun. Go for it.
It can be super expensive in the main cities for housing. Food and fuel more expensive everywhere. But there are cheap places to live, but its like on a curve with the employment opportunities. No surprise there. You can get a house in a town on the West Coast of the South Island for NZ$150,000 - $220,000 easily. Can you get a job there? With difficulty. But, if your cashed up a bit, you can start a business there, and afford a house so easily. ie: A Cafe, or an exporting business and so on and that is true in a lot of smaller rural NZ cities and regions. Same in most countries too of course.
You don't need insurance for private healthcare. You can pay direct. My husband and I have occasionally paid to go private for faster specialist diagnosis or treatment. It can halve the waiting time for some services.
And going private isn't expensive. I needed a minor procedure for an 'inconvenient' problem and chose to cut two weeks off the time to wait for a 'free' operation under the public system by going private. The cost for the preliminary assessment by the specialist, seventy-five minutes in the operating room under anaesthetic and two days recovery in a private room came to around $US6,000. Some would accuse me, and part of me agrees, that I used the fact I could afford it to jump the queue. On the other hand (I'd argue) the slot I would have taken up in the public system, and the cost to the taxpayer, was freed up for someone else, and the fees I paid the surgeon and anaesthetist helped 'subsidise' the time they put into the public service for far less than they could earn elsewhere in the world.
@@SirFeat As far as I'm aware going private isn't jumping the queue. Specialists contract to the DHB to provide a certain amount of public service, and reserve the rest of their time for private patients. The number on their private list is just lower than on their public list so the waiting times are shorter. It annoys me that I feel the need to go private for some diagnostics. The waiting time for diagnostics for life-threatening conditions like cancer have increased in recent years. My husband and I are lucky we can afford to go private (Ranged between $800 and $1500), but I am angry for those who can't. We pay our taxes, and decent healthcare should be a priority when sharing out the money each year. More needs to be put into early identification and treatment. It saves money in the long run.
@@SirFeat The reason why the private op cost so much less than in say the US is because the private system does get a massive subsidy from the public one. Say your private op went seriously wrong for instance you would get transferred into the public one for the critical care. Its the reason why almost private clinics are the same city as the large public hospitals. Not having to carry the overhead of all the backup for complex health issues or emergency is a huge cost saver for private healthcare.
@@user-uy6uc5ey5q Fair enough, but I'd argue that the private system subsidises the public one in that the income from their private practice allows practitioners to also work in the public system for what are pretty meagre scheduled payments. A specialist here who worked 100% in the public system (and yes some do) wouldn't earn anything like what they could earn in the US for probably a lot less pressure, so if their private practice 'on the side' keeps them in NZ we all benefit. And would it have been more 'moral' for me to gone through the public system at the taxpayers expense when I was perfectly able to pay for it myself? As I said, I am sympathetic to both arguments, so am uncomfortable whichever way I go.
@@SirFeat as a medical professional the extra salary would never be worth it due to being sued. Complications can arise no matter what and being part liable for that would just create a stressful work place an a lack of desire to learn new techniques. But that’s just me and a few others I know.
Not all NZers will agree with me however, here’s a tip for yourself, others whom have emigrated or those that wish to relocate here. There are 3 types/groups of Maori that you will encounter. Maori have been colonised and of course are very different compared to pre colonial times. Basically, Maori (aboriginal/indigenous) are Polynesians. Tribally they are very similar throughout the country but not exactly the same. Group 1- Confident in their own historical Maori and Western cultural knowledge. They also realise the vast differences and have the ability to learn from other cultures as well as teach other cultures. Group 2- Not confident enough in Maori historical knowledge but very confident in Western historical knowledge and therefore, when it comes to discussion and debates, most find themselves joining the majority be they Maori or not. Lastly Group 3- Many (for whatever reason) believes that the world owes them something therefore, they despise the system, the law and society in general as well as all other cultures including their own. They will have no problem in telling you or others (in more colourful language) to go back to where you come from if you don’t like it... Please remember that we Maori are all similar but, we are not exactly the same. Noho ora mai.
Houses prices are going through the roof, around 3/4 of a Mil for an average house depending on where u live. Living costs are getting high, rent, power, food, petrol etc for the average income. NZ has a Methamphetimine problem atm, and gangs are becoming more prevalent. If you have a vehicle make sure it's legal, and your driving/parking is within the law at all times, or else it will cost you dearly in traffic fines. NZ has hidden speed cameras everywhere which catch drivers travelling over the speed limit, issuing instant traffic fines which get sent to you by mail
Yip and rent is at criminally high levels, the richest people in NZ pay lower taxes than the poorest people (it was reported recently), we are a renowned tax haven for the rich (so called elite). We have one of the highest rates of suicide per capita in the world, highest rates of depression.... but it's not all bad news, we make one of the nicest ice creams in the southern hemisphere.
Aww beautiful to hear you felt welcome in El Salvador! I'm Salvadorean, but looking for another country to leave temporally while violence issues improve here! Thanks for the video, Big Hug!
I'm so sorry to hear that it's hard with violence in your country as I know the majority of the people there are so wonderful and loving. All the best to you with finding a nice safe place you can call home.
I'm from Gisborne NZ. Yay.. I nearly died when I had to visit a doctor in Ohio usa & Alaska us!!!! Wth & then I needed to pay for the prescriptions. So grateful for universal Healthcare in nz. GRATEFUL. 😊
Long story short, my occupation allows me to work just about anywhere & I've always wanted to experience NZ while I'm young & able. I just don't know how to go about it and began getting realistic about my move as of early May. I've narrowed it down to Wellington & Auckland, but I'm open to other cities. I'm a young professional in my 20s & I'm just trying to gather as much information so I can take the appropriate steps to make this move possible by the end of the year God willing. Also, what's the current state in the country? As far as C-19 goes. Any feedback would be highly appreciated! Tysm for reading up to here! Hope to hear from somebody out there.
Moving here with Covid is really unlikely, until 2022 when just about every kiwi will be vaccinated. Check the NZ immigration website, especially for the short list of jobs that are in demand. If your degree and or job experience is on that list, you will get a huge amount of points on the system they use. Speaking English, your age, a degree, good health, good character (ie no criminal stuff for a long time) all adds up. Some money in the bank helps too. One of the basic guidelines they follow is a test your not going to step off the plane and need state welfare. But that job/career short list really helps. Also: I wrote this elsewhere above, for international people under a certain age, I think it might be 30 or 35, there is a visa that allows a years work visa. Its specifically designed for young people and travelling, ie: itinerate work, such as working on a farm one week, take off and travel somewhere, get work in a bar in the next city, travel on again etc. That could be a perfect way for you to come experience the place, AND network your actual career for beyond the year, as in moving permanently. Good luck
C19 in nz isn't really an issue at all at the moment. You are free to wear mask or not. There are very few restrictions. It feels like life has gone back to normal here.
So nice to hear your perspective on us kiwis ladies and yes I'm guilty in the summer of running across the road from the beach to the supermarket in bear feet lol
Nawwe awesome vlog girlies👍😁 I have a "CON" visits to see the Vet is sooooo pricey😬 everywhere! Even if you only want to have your pet vaccinated or dewormed etc.... 🤦♀️ arrgh! Toooo expensive!😔
Yes, the ship of dreams has certainly sailed with out me for NZ. I'm less than two years away from retiring and know the cost to get there at my age is out of reach even though I will have a great retirement. I have talked to both of my sons about their chances though! One is about to get his PhD in Biology and the second is attempting to get into a Veterinarian program when he is finished with his Bachelors degree next year!! So I know they both could probably make the move if they wanted to.
I was in the US a few years ago. Our motel was next to a supermarket in LA, so I walked in and shopped around barefoot before the security guard came up to me and said i wasn't aloud to shop barefoot😁
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders yea caught me off guard at first😊 Us Kiwis also leave our cars unlocked. I leave my car unlocked if I'm doing a quick 5-10min shopping at the mall or supermarket👍
OK guys, we're loving having you. The word isn't just Maori, it has a different rhythm. It may read as 2 syllables but pronounced 3. Mar o ri with a roll on the 3rd.
I'm a Kiwi who travelled through Tennessee, Kentucky. Stayed on a houseboat on a lake & camped in the Blue Mountains where I saw my first bear & played horseshoe throwing! I loved it & it reminded me of NZ. Green & Beautiful. The people were lovely too, I have so many fantastic memories of the places & people. It was my favourite area in the US :)
Yeah, leaving your door unlocked is very common here. Like, people still do get burgled on occasion, but most burglars are either career criminals who don't care about your locks or meth-heads who also don't care about your locks. You don't really get people opportunistically stealing your stuff because you left the door unlocked. Unless it's a car. Make sure you lock your car. People will strip your car clean if they find it unlocked. 😂 As someone who's only known the NZ school system, it was interesting to hear and realise that the outdoor-oriented layout of our schools is quite remarkable. I went to four different primary schools across the North Island, and they all had the same core layout of a central quad with 3-4 blocks of classrooms around the outside, so for most classrooms there was always two walls with windows and no indoor corridors between them. Having a suitable lesson outside in the quad or on the field wasn't uncommon, as it was easy for the teacher to get us out and back in again. It makes you feel so much more connected to the outside and less like you're cooped up indoors, especially if you have to switch rooms which we usually did for maths lessons. It was the same at my intermediate school albeit with extra blocks scattered around, and you got even more fresh air as the room switching increased to prepare you for secondary school. My secondary school had larger classroom blocks and those had indoor corridors, but it was always the same subject along a given corridor so you typically still had to go outside whenever you went to your next class. The focus on public speaking never occurred to me either; getting up and speaking in front of the class about a topic was very common from the beginning, whether it was just a quick story about what you did in the weekend or a fully researched presentation about something the class was studying. I remember when I was nearly 8yo, we had to research and speak about our favourite animal, with each class choosing one person to repeat their presentation before the entire school assembly. I chose cicadas, which I don't think was quite the intent but I've always been obsessed with them (people often hate the racket they make, but to me it's the music of summer) so I put a lot of effort into researching everything about them for my presentation, which was chosen to be repeated before the school. Wanting to inspire everyone to love cicadas as much as I did, I insisted upon dragging my mother throughout the neighbourhood in search of moulted cicada shells to collect and use as visual aids for the assembly. I was adamant that we collect enough cicada shells so that everyone at the assembly could have one to look at, which took the entire weekend as it was already March and by then many of the shells had already blown away and the cicadas were starting to die off. It was a little embarrassing for my mother, who was left with the task of explaining the situation and politely asking everyone in the neighbourhood if we could hunt through their yards, though everyone was more than happy to oblige and some even offered to help. We ended up with two entire plastic bags (yes, though were the days) full of cicada shells, which proved to be more than enough and became quite the hassle for all the teachers who I co-opted into handing them out while I was giving the presentation. In the end, my dream of inspiring everyone to love cicadas came true, though, and many of the other kids were coming up to me afterwards asking if they could take home some of the leftover shells to play with and start their own collection. Such a positive experience with public speaking reinforced to me the value and importance of communication skills, and I think it left quite an impression on me given my young age, so I've never had any reservations about public speaking ever since (which is just as well, because they make you do speeches like that all the way up to and through secondary school). It's only just now, though, watching this video, that I've come to realise how much I've taken our education system for granted and how lucky I am that it gave me so many opportunities for personal development and growth. At the time, it was just an ordinary school to me, but hearing someone speak about it so highly has made me even more thankful for our uplifting culture and humanistic values here in Aotearoa New Zealand, and led me to appreciate how much a life can be changed by something so small and so simple as an empty cicada shell.
@@floydkingi4364 We had an outboard motor stolen from our secured garden shed while we were away. They had to get it over a solid meter and a half wall.We live in Central Rotorua, one block from shops and businesses. Funny thing was, the outboard hadnt been used for over 25 years since we lived at KohuKohu.
I think one of our biggest negatives is the quality of housing. We live in a country thats pretty cold in the winter and hot in the summer but so many houses still don't have insulation. Heating is subpar and expensive to run. No central heating unless you're fancy. I've lived in my fair share of cold, damp, mouldy homes 😩
Oh yes this is no fun. We’ve stayed in both homes that we’re freezing cold in the winter here and beautiful homes with in floor heating so I hear you. Especially if they’re damp then you really feel the cold.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders sometimes it does feel like we live 50 years behind other countries 😂 but I still wouldn't want to live anywhere else and we're very fortunate that we've been able to build a nice warm, dry new house
Wellington to Auckland may be a long drive and rail services are very limited, but there are frequent and inexpensive flights between the two cities, as there are to all the other major population centres.
I would love to ask, how do you feel about your childrens overall intergration and development into kiwi culture, and with your children learning Te Reo Maori at school. Love the videos you have good points of topic keep it up
When my Canadian father married my Kiwi mother in 1992, he read a little fun factoid that said NZ was top 10 for dangerous driving in the world. My mother who grew up in that setting still to this day accelerates down a road and doesn't naturally follow the speed limit. When I was visiting for the first time to NZ in spring of 2001, we were almost run off the road going around a corner by another driver who was in our lane, cutting the corner, to save time. I think when I was around 12 on a visit that I saw ads for the first time on the TV telling drivers to slow down. And they were some good ads! I still vividly remember one of them. It was after this point that I could tell that NZ was starting to have safer drivers. Anyway, so even though getting a ticket for going a couple of kilometers above the speed limit is SUPER annoying, knowing how bad it used to be and the mentality that was baked into Kiwi's about speed, I'm glad to see such aggressive tactics.
That’s a crazy story. Whatever they’re doing is working because I don’t seem to notice too many speedy drivers and we’ve done many drives throughout the whole country. They do have signs everywhere though that say slow down or warning signs for ice patches on some of the windy roads so this must be helping too.
Yeah I heard Vancouver is beautiful but not sure you can compare a whole country to BC...Wait till you see all our upcoming videos on NZ to see what I mean. I've never seen a country like this and we've been to 100 so far. I was in Vancouver but only as a small child so I don't remember much...will have to go back one day bc it's probably the closest thing in CDN to NZ.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders I'm sure NZ is beautiful. Just being a patriotic Canuck, you know. Staying true to the home team and all that. Anyways, I hope you and your family enjoy your time there.
There is generally a 10% allowance for traveling over the speed limit in NZ and this applies to cameras as well. During busy periods such as public holidays this is sometimes reduced to 4 km over (but it has no beneficial effect on the road toll)
The reason everything is always green isn't because of temperature it's because our forests are majority evergreen. Ferns are like pine trees, they *do not* drop their leaves in autumn, even if you like, transported them to Antarctica or something. Also we have a lot of pine tree forestry too. I think there's only *one* species of native tree which drops it's leaves in autum.
The reason we don’t build big cross country rail networks and super highways is because they would be a stain on the landscape. The roads are quite windy in places because they follow the natural flow of the land. We like the aesthetic of the natural flow of the land. It takes longer to reach places which is good because, in NZ, the journey should be as beautiful as the destination.
Yeah and it wouldn't be an easy task plus for the number of people it probably wouldn't make sense to put this in place.
Ok
NZ doesn't need it. Simple.
Actually my friends grandpa told us that in the South Island they used the army to build roads and he said they paid them by the yard stick. They worked out the more bends and curves they put in the more they got paid. He said that's why in places where they could have pretty much gone straight there are many bends in the road.
@@blinkybill2198 totally genius
Maori boy living away for 30 years! You two made me homesick for the first time
Gross bro
I loved that video. I've lived in NZ for 10 years (from UK originally) and I love it so much. It was the best decision I ever made. One thing I like that was covered in the video is that everyone is fair and reasonable. Kiwis are straightforward down-to-earth people and they don't believe in making life difficult for each other. There is so much freedom here.
me too ! 16 yrs ago from conrwall to dunedin!
"So much freedom"🙄New Zealand has the most anti democratic and restrictive laws for the scamdemic in the world. Ardern is a dictator.
I'm a Canadian and I've been to New Zealand and I find the kiwis just as friendly as my home.
That's awesome to hear! Kiwi born, spent a few years in Vancouver. I Love your beautiful country!! Now reside in California. Just glad the Kings gave me some redemption for 94!!
Not any more nz has changed in the worst way Australia is better
Agreed. I'm a Kiwi and have been to Canada and felt like I was back in New Zealand. :)
Thanks for this. I think there is an element of complainers in New Zealand but we really need to be more grateful. You shine a light on us. Thank you for choosing Aotearoa as your home.
Thanks Sonya for the warm welcome!
>I think there is an element of complainers in New Zealand
There definitely is not. In fact, Kiwis complain too little
If people are complaining,they know more about what they are talking about,safety,not sure I would agree,can't trust cop,judges,lawyers,social development,inland revenue,social workers,sent qualified not all nzers not lock their doors,not everyone is friendly.
Agreeing with you Sonya. it's some of the ones who never been outside of new Zealand just love moaning. They are entitled and ungrateful. in my job out of over 60 people I spoke to 10 of those are moaners. Never happy no matter how hard you try to help. I've travelled and anyone who lives in this country should be grateful.
@@cooledcannon Not in my experience. People complain about a lot, especially those influenced by the American right-wing groups. I wasn't born here, so nationalism doesn't influence my opinion when I say that New Zealand is paradise. We have very few things to complain about. The price of housing is a legitimate concern ; outside of that, there really isn't anything to complain about.
As a maori and new zealand european girl from the Wellington area, I find the comparisons between both countries is so interesting. Never realized that the pros & cons are so unique and different. Absolutely love this video!
@@351clevelandmodifiedmotor4
Nah not from Europe. From NZ, dad whose māori and mum whose kiwi.
Two totally different ways of thinking...
NZ philosophy : "The needs of the many outweighs the needs of the few."
US philosophy : "My needs are more important than the needs of the many."
And that's what makes NZ a more compassionate country. And that's how we beat COVID-19.
Agreed 💯
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders pray for me and my family of 5. 3 special needs children and everything in america is more focused on the rich and not like how new zealand is. we are gonna try to come there but it is so hard right now with the lockdown and needing a work visa..any tips?
First, we are a nation that values individual liberty It's enshrined in our constitution. It's not an accident that the country that values individual liberty the most is also the richest and the most powerful, and leads the world in science, technology, medicine, space, sports, entertainment..you name it. Secondly , you didn't beat anything. You only delayed the inevitable because of stupid politicians (we have them too)with your isolation and lockdowns and finally your politicians have come to the realization that it's not practical and Covid is something you have to live with, so they are opening up. The fact that their tourism based economy was taking a beating from lack of tourism may have had something to do with it.
@@TrollMeister_ You forgot school shootings on your leader board
Beat covid lol what are our numbers from the last 2 weeks?
I'm a NZ native (Maori) and Yes growing up we never wore shoes, our teachers were forever trying to get us to wear shoes, only wore shoes to play sport, no shoes no play.. Doors were never locked.. Camping under the stars were the norm.. Getting dinner from the 🌊 is a way life.
Sounds like a wonderful place to grow up..easy going ..very earthy
Chur bro I remember running from cow shit to cow shit to keep the waewae warm .no shoes for us back in the day, rawe ke nga maumahara
As a kiwi I really love how much independence parents give their children. It builds the kids immune system to get down and grubby.
Also, I grew up in a tiny town called Shannon and we literally never ever locked our doors ever. Always feel so safe wherever I go.
It's changed so much over the years though which is such a shame! I'm so glad to be raising my children rural so they still have a fair bit of freedom but it was definitely safer when I was a child
Unless your parent is a poly, if that’s your case then forget it😂
@@arandomman9934 what's poly
@@Huuuuuuuuuuuu107 polynesian
Same here
I am a kiwi who travelled around a fair bit in my youth (the Great OE), but when it came to settling down and having my daughter, there was no place like home. I am glad that you feel so welcome and safe here. I slept last night not only with my front door unlocked, but wide open. lol
Haha kiwi here living in Germany. Happened to me too when I was back in NZ. Got home late, fell asleep, left the front door wide open.
Omygoodness this speaks to my heart. I’m a born and raised New Zealander and have been living the North Carolina for the past 7 years with my four kids and American husband. Every month I cry to go home and I think we’ll start the process of coming back to New Zealand to raise our kids. My son struggles with school cause he’s so active and it’s rigid and I want them to feel free to explore and learn that way. It’s refreshing that I’m not alone in my experiences of being here compared to Nz
I hope you are able to meet your goal of getting back to New Zealand to raise your kids. Where in NZ are you from?
That 25 minutes 34 seconds went quite fast. Well done! I was born in NZ and didn't really need to watch, but did anyway.
I love you guys. Thank you I’m a Kiwi Born Samoan and always love hearing what others have to say about our country.
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed the video!
People First in NZ 13:28 Maori Whakatauki/Proverb (He aha te mea nui o te ao?) What is the most important thing in the world? (He tangata He Tangata He Tangata) It is the People, It is the people, It is the people. Many Maori values are imbedded in NZ culture, the concept of showing manakitanga or hospitality to guests or visitors is one of the pillars of Maori society. Where do you think you'll take your Whanau next?
America's loss - our gain! Love you girls and the common sense you display... and the humour of course!
Thanks! 🙌🤩
I started watching videos of this kind because I wanted to know how bad things were in the USA but your videos have changed my mindset to make me appreciate my country more instead of thinking less of others, keep up the good work, proud to have you in our home
The US still has SO much to offer. It’s still the land of opportunity. 💯Also there’s a huge entrepreneurial spirit there that you don’t always find in other countries.
Hey im a kiwi. My parents live 5hrs north of me and I don't drive. In NZ we have the intercity bus, the interislander ferry and a train that goes through most of the North island. Also we have ferries that are able to get you to many places in Auckland. I can catch a ferry to Waiheke, Coromandel, Rangitoto and many other places. We do have the public transport to make up for not having a car and it's not as stressful and more comfortable than driving
Wow. It’s lovely to see that you are both so happy and settled here in New Zealand 🇳🇿 Welcome! :) I am a Kiwi and yes we have our problems like any other country but the positives certainly out way the negatives. We are a long way away from the rest of the world, but I do think we have it all here, so our need for travel to experience or get to see things such as snow, beaches, mountains, cities, forests is all in easy travel distance for all. I’ve travelled to most places around the world apart from the Asian countries, and lived in Australia for a few years and I personally think Australians and New Zealanders are so blessed to live in the part of the world. We have so much freedom and a stress free life here, we are not battling to get anything, not waiting for hours in lines, rushing on busy motorways, cramped on transport, getting out of the way on busy streets with people pushing you around. We are lucky to have the Maori culture ingrained in all of us as Kiwis and it is such a warm and welcoming culture. We share, we support one another, we care and help each other. The government looks after us and there is no reason to be homeless or have no where to turn to for help. This little hidden gem we call “Gods own” really is a very spiritual and sacred place and I feel so blessed to live here. All the best to you both and your families and I hope that your honeymoon period never stops, I don’t think it will :) x
Kia ora, Chantelle & Terra! Thanks for the reply!! It's great what you're doing especially geography for Americans! As well as spending time in Canada before moving to the U.S. it was such an adjustment. Seeing you guys I'm like YES, someone understands!! Hope Lower Hutt is treating you right!!
As a born and bred Kiwi it's super interesting learning about the differences between here and US. I am mostly online so a lot of my friends are from overseas (mostly US) and always remark on my accent and how different everything is, and I've been loving showing them my country and learning about theirs and it's so great to hear your own experiences! I'm really glad you're loving it here and I totally agree with the cons, prices for everything are ridiculous lately and it feels like it is only going to get dearer. As a former JAFA I can confirm you definitely need a car to get about, and even then the traffic is ludicrous. Every nation and corner of the world has its faults, and NZ is no different, but it's very much a safe paradise away from the chaos of the world, I love it here and I'm glad you guys do too. c:
As a kiwi I'm proud to be a kiwi in new Zealand and the most beautiful and one of a kind place I would never leave I appreciate my country we are laid back here 🇳🇿🇳🇿
nobody here is actually "laid back," they just shove their feelings under the rug and are resentful on the inside.
Have to agree with most of what you said, looking at it from a Kiwi living in the USA after five years, to when I was there. Life is just so much easier in New Zealand . Kiwi from Virginia
I agree 💯!!
But there must be something a lot better about the USA for you to stay there than return to New Zealand. My sister emigrated to the USA 30 something years ago and is also critical about life in the USA. But she hardly returns Aotearoa so again there must be a lot of pluses with living the American Dream.
@@tomhu1745 I am not being critical of life here in the USA, they are very different. I just prefer life in NZ especially for bring up children. Living in a country with fewer population is so much easier. The reason I came to the US, I was asked to come by my only child to live within his family, and after all my immediate family in NZ had passed. I was alone and it made sense. He has lived here over 20 years now and the opportunities he has had far outweigh what he would have had back in NZ. Like in everything, there is good and bad, it's really what is best for you.
Love the vid Aunties!! Made me miss NZ. Lot's of facts about living there and still a beautiful country.
Housing is very expensive relative to typical household incomes.
A very recent govt. report confirmed that supermarket food is fairly expensive in New Zealand compared to other developed economies.
Income taxes on modest incomes are higher, esp. for singles and childless couples.
Absolutely true to the word. As a Kiwi living abroad it just make me proud of who I am and where I come from.
Thank you ladies for your complement and honesty.
I live in NZ, have travelled a lot and lived in China for several years.I love the freedom I grew up with. We would never lock our doors even when we went away for a holiday. We would bike around the rural roads for a whole day as 8 - 10 year olds or adventure down the back of the farm all day, and just come home for dinner. Nobody worried about us. I think this helped me to move to China at 55 years old. I think we just grew up with an adventurous spirit. Also we all helped out on the farm from a young age, so we are used to hard work, but also have the confidence we can try anything. I could drive a tractor at 10 and back a trailer at 11. Thanks for pointing out all the great things about our country. Its good for us to hear it. We call it Godszone!! Glad you got stuck here for covid. You got to find our more about us.
that was me too and my brother and friend ,we would do the same ..bike around alot ,go fishing or bike to the beach on a hot day etc ,our house wasnt locked either at night ,i miss my young years now im in my 50s as well
I agree with almost everything you both said. I've done my fair share of travelling and I think NZ is pretty special. I wouldn't want to live anywhere else.
Loved your video ladies. Great to get a US/CA opinion about the differences. As an Australian, where I feel very privileged to have been born, I can't help looking at NZ and wanting to live there. It's just a stunningly beautiful country, I don't think that's often fully appreciated. I'm not just talking about places like Milford Sound, but almost anywhere you look is beautiful. Even the lakes are bright blue! My family drove from Christchurch to Queenstown on a holiday and even just driving along the coast with those snow capped mountains in the distance was a treat and then to stop at places like Lake Tekapo, well, it was hard to believe the scenery. But probably the overwhelming thing, and you guys touched on it many times in your video, is the people and the culture. There's something about Kiwi culture ands vibe that is so attractive. Australia is very similar in culture but there is a difference. I feel that Kiwi's in general are how you described as 'real'. In Australia, people are friendly, but also a bit more competitive, a bit less likely to extend themselves for others or give up what they have for others and I think also Australian society is more class-defined. Enjoy the hell out of NZ ladies, you're onto something sweet eh?
You said it exactly right. The people here are what make it so attractive not just the scenery. People go out of their way to help you and it’s 100% genuine. You really feel loved and appreciate. I don’t feel as much racism like I do in other countries too which is so nice. (And I’ve visited a few to know this) New Zealand is a true example for the world to learn from.
Have a gander at a youtube video titled solo hiking the Abel Tasman Coast track.
Pro: the sales tax is included in the price of everything except wholesale.
Well, large things like expensive furniture and cars, not so much, but they explicitly declare that on the tags because GST included is the default otherwise.
Many years ago i lived in NZ & have thought about going back as I like the climate there, but the problem is the Rental prices is just too expensive to be viable to live there unless u have a good income or are financially well off.
Move away from cities. Better life and cheaper.
@@gissyb1 just as expensive in small communities. Not only that, but many rental places are in deplorable condition. Law heavily weighed in favor of landlords.
Rental is gone even higher,, everything is waaay more expensive,,
@@jac3271 Ibe heard most of the regular houses has no insulation. So people freeze in them. Especially those on the South Island. It also says the heating expenses go was up. Then I've heard most heat and cook with gas and the lines are so bad and people don't know what to check for with gas leaks that many homes exploded from the heat or the cook stove.
The best thing is the 1200 mile moat to the left and 9000 m to the right.
3:32 NewZealand parents are obsessed with eye-injuries; all through my childhood I was cautioned against poking someone's eye out.
@@SiliconBong 🤣🤣🤣
@@SiliconBong "you'll take someones eye out with that" hahaha
@@SiliconBong Its all fun and games until somebodies eye gets poked out! Lol
Your point of views and all the details in the informations are really precious ❤ thank you so much on making this video
My pleasure 😊
I’m a kiwi born Aussie.. this is great commentary. NZ and Australia are great places to live... If you haven’t been to Gisborne, plan it. It is a gorgeous city, with beautiful beaches and rich culture.. my hometown.
Totally agree GISBORNE is AMAZING!!!!
Wow I didn't know it was so bad in the US. Glad you are so happy here - it is a lovely country. .... although I don't personally know of anyone who doesn't lock their front door to be honest. We always have locked our doors at night and when going out. The crime isn't too bad, but there is enough for most people to lock their homes and cars just in case.
Half a century or so ago nobody locked their doors because they had nothing worth pinching, not everyone had a car and what could you do with a car that everyone knew who it belonged to. But definitely lock everything today.
I have to admit, we only lock the doors if we leave the property. Don't even have locks on the sleepout/B&B room.
@Janette Verkerk - In many countries you would keep your door locked even when you are in the house.
For 10 years we lived in a provincial town (5,000 people). Over that time we probably locked the house doors ... 10 times?
@@HandyEh I can understand that if you know your community well.
Making me homesick, my parents are still in Otara South Auckland
Thank you for the positive exposure of our beautiful country.
Informative video and nice editing 👍👍
BTW My school exam is starting from day after tomorrow, I am well prepared. You guys are lucky that you guys don't have exams like other students and also you guys are getting best education in life ( travelling ) from such a young age.
Have a great day guys ☺☺
Love from India ❤❤❤
Canadian here. Loved the video. lived in NZL for 15 years. I definatel agree to your comments. An awesome and a beautiful country. People are easy going and friendly,. The best country on earth
Oh nice! You must miss NZ. Where did you live when you were here?
Im a Kiwi living in the US (moving home next year) and i have had a lot of American friends tell me that the free healthcare system is bad because we get taxed higher. Honestly I left NZ when i was 17 so i never really payed attention to that type of thing, but i did work full time at the warehouse, and i never noticed a HUGE income tax compared to the US, it felt the same to me. Thank you for your video. Also one "con" that some people might have is that it's hard to get things shipped from overseas since NZ is at the bottom of the world. In America you can find and ship ANYTHING. In New Zealand it will cost you a fortune for shipping.
It's a con by the health insurance industry and the health professionals ,the Americans fall for .
We pay a similar level of tax and do not need health insurance (another tax)
Generally, Kiwis pay slightly higher taxes than Americans... A difference that is utterly Obliterated when you realise that Americans pay for health insurance On Top Of That, while Kiwis don't. (And then the insurance companies pull every trick in the book to avoid and minimize payouts. For all people complain about ACC and "pre-existing" injuries that are nothing of the sort, it ain't got Nothing on US health insurance.)
The taxes are very similar, but calculated in many different ways in the States. You get better results in NZ, as the country doesn't invest a massive percentage of its taxes into defense, intelligence and law and order. That money here goes to education and healthcare. You will pay a similar amount of taxes here in NZ but save by not paying hardly anything for healthcare. Yes our petrol and food and rents are expensive and if your under that curve it really hurts. The food is cheap in America because it is grown on the backs of the undocumented.... ohhh I did not just say that.
shipping is expensive
@@paulprice1705 Well, we tried to stop those undocumented but, the lefties just keep bringing them in droves. If you are a kiwi then thank the Gods that you don't have a border with another country that is hemorrhaging millions of people into your country from a whole different continent.
Very informative and educative, Thank you very much 🙏🙏
I’m very much interested to visit New Zealand.
Yes! Once borders open up you should definitely come and check it out.
Wonderfully informative video. Thank you for posting this.
Our pleasure!
I am a kiwi. My husband and I went on holiday for a couple of weeks and forgot to lock the front door. Everything was all right when we got back but we usually would not go away without locking up. But it does seem reasonably safe.
Bare feet - we lived in the UK for a few years and had our first child there. When she began to walk I naturally made sure she had bare feet so she could get a better grip on the planet’s surface. The UK mothers said that if they saw a child with bare feet they would assume the family was extremely poor. They would not let their children go without shoes even inside the house and even though it meant that their toddlers would be able to walk more safely. I love walking on lawn and sand with bare feet.
One of the cons of living in NZ which you really need to be here for a few years to realise can be a problem is that legislation/social change is often very speedy - no upper house to slow things down (we used to have one but abolished it in the early 1950s) and a lot of legislation is passed making changes before other similar countries. (It means they can study what works and doesn’t work. ) Because we are a small in population country and mostly fairly well-educated with no upper house it means that a lot of legislation/social change needs to be tweaked to get it to work well. I remember the change to decimal currency - NZ did it first and mistakes had to be ironed out, then Australia did it learning from NZs mistakes and finally the UK changed learning from Aus and NZ. I was living in each country on the first day of change and believe that NZers adapted better to the changes without the drama that occurred in the other two countries although they had fewer errors in their planning. Thank you for the interesting talk. I am always a little surprised at your view of NZ. There are international indicators that all goats can be called to account on but politicians in big countries have more pressure from the rich and powerful so the electorate is less able to call them to account.
Australia introduced decimal currency in 1965, NZ two years later in 1967.
@@karenhaag1048 yes, you’re right. Good pick up. I must have been thinking of the day they passed the legislation although I was in the three. Countries when they implemented it.
@@karenhaag1048 ... and not a good example.
My family has been here for 10 generations
Traveled the world
We are not perfect
We are still innocent
Our isolation protects us
This is Godzone
and we must protect it
Thankyou for your nice comments
10 generations? That would mean emigration to NZ in the 1700's which didn't happen.
When I was born there is a photo of me as a baby
with 5 generations theres been 2 more gens since and I
have photos of kids going back to 1878
in Dunedin, so there a couple more,Dunedin was first
populated in 1848,so maybe not quite 10,but depends on which
Great Aunt you talk to after a few Sherries.
You are very wrong there buddy, very wrong…
Omg you're so right about not locking the front door! My parents would do that when I was growing up and in summer they would leave the front door wide open to let the night air come in lol...Our cars were also left unlock (sometimes with the keys in the ignition) and windows down..we never thought of anyone stealing the vehicles or coming in to the house..which sounds bizarre but it was just the norm! lol
I remember getting in trouble from my dad once FOR actually locking the car! Apprentlu inconvenienced him lol. There are a lot of things I don't love about nz but I do appreciate how relaxed and safe it is!
@@shontellename9252 that's too funny..it honestly was the convenience factor for my parents too lol
That's the way it is in lots of affluent suburbs and in the country.
Yes we did the same I have been living in England for four years and will forget to lock the door
Thanks for all the information, chantal. Very informative video.
The presentation is also awesome.
In my experience, there is about a 8km/h buffer for the speeds you are driving in NZ. Only during public holidays/long weekends they usually reduce the buffer to 4km/h over the posted speed limit. But it is always best to keep within the speed limit for safety reasons. There is no need to rush anywhere, if you know how long it will take to get to your destination, leave a little earlier so you can take it easy and relax.
If you go to Aussie, their posted speed limits IS the limit. If you go over that speed they ticket you. However their posted signs are usually 10km/h above those in NZ.
ie: Urban: NZ 50km/h, AU 60km/h. Motorways NZ 100km/h, AU 110km/h
That’s interesting about Aussie. You’re right...no need to speed but somehow I always find myself going a bit faster than I should. 😳
Just a little thing; Aussie is a person/s living in Australia, not the country. We usually say OZ, or "Stralia" - if you have the accent - meaning country. Cheers mate. 😊
Wow that was amazing watching you both... I appreciate my country more after watching this. Thank you both 😀
Great! Glad you enjoyed it! 🙌🤩
It's cheaper to fly between cities that it will cost to drive (vehicle running costs) and in the larger centers it is cheaper to hire a car than to use a cab from the airport. I travel for business.
Christchurch: from the airport to the city return by taxi ~ $90 ; a rental car for the day $34 with full insurance or $10 without + fuel (Snap Rentals, Go Rentals)
Hi ladies. A good place to go and visit is Lake Waikaremoana up on the East coast out of Wairoa, north of Napier. A nice place to be away from everything. Good place to camp, go bush walking, fishing.
We heard this is a great place to visit! We'll be back on the North Island in April and should plan a visit.
Another great video. I've just come from watching the video where you mentioned Kiwis adding "as" after some words...had a chuckle when you said "sweet as" @7:31 😂 Would love to hear what your children think of New Zealand!
Yeah the first time I heard someone say sweet as was in Nicaragua with a family we met there from Rotorua. It grows on you really fast. Our girls have really loved being here in NZ.
Looking at what is happening in America, is really sad. However I truly believe at their core, Americans are good people with compassion, kindness and a generous spirit. Where the absolute tragedy is has been the response from the last President who I struggle, on any level to call a leader and more particularly the toxic media that is more interested in power, their ratings, presenter egos and advertising revenue. What an absolute cluster.
I get the impression that living from pay cheque to pay cheque, never taking a holiday in case you lose your job, or of being fired on whim, under stress all the time gets to people in the USA in the end - I see a lot of Americans who seem to be wound up so so so tight. They all just need four weeks off every year.
Super grateful for this video I live in NC and have been sussing this topic for a long time but I honestly have no clue what it might be like. So again super grateful for the information hope to join you someday.
People in NZ is relax because they are entitle to mandatory vacation paid leave. In USA its luxury to have paid vacation leave. You should discuss the retirement/superfund of NZ workers towards retirement, maternity leave, long service leave and sick leave.
There really is no such thing as the "pros and cons" of moving to another country . You just have to accept the new country for what it is, and not compare it with the country you left behind.
Don’t tend to agree.
Re the US... no national healthcare. No gun control, to the degree your kids have “Active Shooter” drills in schools, is definitely a con, for me.
Personally, they are a game breaker if I was considering a move to the US.
And that was before Donnyboy.
Unfortunately, now that I’ve seen that a major segment of America find no fault with his lying, corruption, racism, bigotry, misogyny, nepotism.... the US is definitely a no-go area.
So sad for decent Americans, such as these ladies here on this video... tainted by and forever marked with the Donnyboy stain.
@@rwags6848 👏👏
@@rwags6848 totally agree. He made America the laughing stock of the world. Im wondering are we going to witness 21st centry version of the fall of Rome, and Britian? It just seems too divided and crazy to ever come back after the week of mass shootings. And really if u cant all be safe and equal in your own country, then how can u demand others behave to your version of democracy. BTW its not a true democracy as it has a senate which is a republic style of government and an amendment means its not the original version of a document. It has been changed, possible with time as it progressed. They really need to be better educated on their own government.
@@rwags6848 usa needs to get its shit together befoire i would move there
@@user1oooify Agreed with the 1st half... “get its shit together”.
Unfortunately, racism and bigotry, a heightened belief of self-importance, a gun-centric society, a high level of gullibility, national healthcare = socialism, money rules all, corrupt and overtly partisan government .... are not short term fixes.
In some perverse way, they should thank Drumph and the GOP for exposing the true America. At least the issues can now be openly addressed and plans made to resolve (maybe 🤔).
If you come to NZ you will see that its the greatest ..
Australia is the greatest!!
@@jjohnson2247 too many dangerous snakes and spiders! Though I’ve visited a couple of times from NZ and I do like Australia a lot and I think Aussies are very friendly, helpful and relaxed people too.
I miss my country 🥰🥰 since covid we haven't been able to go home.. we now live in Australia an can't go home yet
Nicole Ahuriri - - Yes it must be frustrating seeing these videos pop up all the time - when you are still trying to get home.
Good luck to you.
You will find (especially in Auckland) most of the green spaces is actually Maori Land and you cannot develop on it. The Iwi allow the public to use the space in payment the council must do the upkeep of lawns and gardening etc. loved the show.
A lot of the green spaces are DOC land for all NZers
90% of DOC land was gifted by Iwi
I live in nz, born and raised here. You say that everyone here is nice and friendly but not everyone is. I work in a supermarket and I deal with rude, snobby, mean people almost every week. It was worse during the first and second lockdown. Not everyone went along with it, there were people who didn't listen or weren't cooperating with the rules. Yes NZ is a beautiful country but in my opinion I don't agree with some of the things you said. Like getting a speeding ticket when you were 2kms over the limit. Speed limits are there for a reason, it's so everyone else is safe. You may think its ridiculous but its actually what saves so many lives
They are of course comparing NZ with the US. When I lived there, someone in your service position wouldn't just face more of that behaviour everyday to the degree that it seems as semi normal, if you ever mildly pushed back, for instance saying "no need to be rude" or were even mildly sarcastic comment, more often than not, you would lose your job that day if the rude person complained. Employers back the rude customer almost every time, no matter the unreasonable behaviour.
Yes I agree with you. These two woman have made so many generalizations about New Zealand. Someone watching this from overseas who has not been here would have the impression that there is next to no crime here, that everyone is middle class or rich and everyone is happy and that the Government will look after everyone. But we know the reality is that there are hundreds of thousands if not millions of people in New Zealand are struggling.
@@tomhu1745 Hardly Tom.
Nice Van Gogh on the wall. Must be quite valuable.
That was good topical coverage. Thanks.
Why lock doors when a Van Gogh is only worth a weeks rent in NZ. 😂
😂😂😂Tara painted that one!
Hi there! I'm an American looking into studying in NZ at the University of Otago! Thank you so much for making this video, it has really put me at ease. You are both right: what you see on the news isn't even half of what's actually going on here. There are places the government has given up on trying to help. I've lived here my whole life and it is getting worse. I can't go out at night without being scared for my life. I've never felt like I could call this place my home since I feel so out of place here. I hope to find that feeling elsewhere. I'm an African American female, but I've been told I "act white", my entire life. I'm not saying any of this for sympathy, I'm just sharing a bit of my story...but I'm so glad you both love NZ! Thank you again :)
Im a born and bred kiwi who is also on my way to studying at Otago in the near future. We would love to have you!
Another thing that is different about NZ and the USA is that in New Zealand there is no security checks at the airport for domestic flights. Like in the USA for a domestic flight you have to go through TSA but here in New Zealand you go straight from check-in to the gate. There is no security checks for domestic flights.
I often recall the story of Eve Van Grafhorst, who as a baby growing up in Australia, suffered from haemophilia and contracted AIDS. In those early days of that pandemic, her and her family were treated atrociously, mercilessly hounded, ostracized by her community and Government authorities Eve who only 3 years old at the time was treated terribly.
When a news program covered the situation was broadcast in New Zealand, some folk began raising money to bring them over. Jobs were found and they settled into Hastings. Eve turned out to be special girl, and became a willing participant in AIDS education, becoming a beloved person nationally until her death at the age of 11.
There is a quiet compassion that runs through the veins of the country and the people genuinely care for the less fortunate. And it's something I miss living abroad.
Hii im watching from Austria and me and my BFF have been talking about movig to NZ to escape our toxic households and LET ME TELL YOU. This is literally all im looking for. I get it, its probably expensive and all that but as you said, u get more money so that shouldnt be an issue. I just finally want to have peace and i really really love the vibes new zealand gives. Like, you said its so laid back and so calm and nice and welcoming. THATS LITERALLY ALL IM LOOKING FOR OMG😭😭💕
I’m sure you’d love it but you’d miss Europe at the same time too. It’s definitely a very laid back and balanced lifestyle here. We’ll be releasing so many NZ videos so you’ll be able to see a really good overview of what it’s like. 😉
Noah, often people toss up the financial factors when comparing options but I think just about everyone either forgets or underestimates the 'cost' of things like stress, crime, safety etc. I'm not surprised that Chantelle and Tara have found that overall, the money pretty much balances out, but that's the just the $ side of things. Even if it was overall more expensive to live in NZ, when you factor in the true cost of stress, fear of safety, freedom to roam and explore, life is much less 'expensive' and much more satisfying and fun. Go for it.
It can be super expensive in the main cities for housing. Food and fuel more expensive everywhere. But there are cheap places to live, but its like on a curve with the employment opportunities. No surprise there. You can get a house in a town on the West Coast of the South Island for NZ$150,000 - $220,000 easily. Can you get a job there? With difficulty. But, if your cashed up a bit, you can start a business there, and afford a house so easily. ie: A Cafe, or an exporting business and so on and that is true in a lot of smaller rural NZ cities and regions. Same in most countries too of course.
You don't need insurance for private healthcare. You can pay direct. My husband and I have occasionally paid to go private for faster specialist diagnosis or treatment. It can halve the waiting time for some services.
And going private isn't expensive. I needed a minor procedure for an 'inconvenient' problem and chose to cut two weeks off the time to wait for a 'free' operation under the public system by going private. The cost for the preliminary assessment by the specialist, seventy-five minutes in the operating room under anaesthetic and two days recovery in a private room came to around $US6,000.
Some would accuse me, and part of me agrees, that I used the fact I could afford it to jump the queue. On the other hand (I'd argue) the slot I would have taken up in the public system, and the cost to the taxpayer, was freed up for someone else, and the fees I paid the surgeon and anaesthetist helped 'subsidise' the time they put into the public service for far less than they could earn elsewhere in the world.
@@SirFeat As far as I'm aware going private isn't jumping the queue. Specialists contract to the DHB to provide a certain amount of public service, and reserve the rest of their time for private patients. The number on their private list is just lower than on their public list so the waiting times are shorter. It annoys me that I feel the need to go private for some diagnostics. The waiting time for diagnostics for life-threatening conditions like cancer have increased in recent years. My husband and I are lucky we can afford to go private (Ranged between $800 and $1500), but I am angry for those who can't. We pay our taxes, and decent healthcare should be a priority when sharing out the money each year. More needs to be put into early identification and treatment. It saves money in the long run.
@@SirFeat The reason why the private op cost so much less than in say the US is because the private system does get a massive subsidy from the public one. Say your private op went seriously wrong for instance you would get transferred into the public one for the critical care. Its the reason why almost private clinics are the same city as the large public hospitals. Not having to carry the overhead of all the backup for complex health issues or emergency is a huge cost saver for private healthcare.
@@user-uy6uc5ey5q Fair enough, but I'd argue that the private system subsidises the public one in that the income from their private practice allows practitioners to also work in the public system for what are pretty meagre scheduled payments. A specialist here who worked 100% in the public system (and yes some do) wouldn't earn anything like what they could earn in the US for probably a lot less pressure, so if their private practice 'on the side' keeps them in NZ we all benefit.
And would it have been more 'moral' for me to gone through the public system at the taxpayers expense when I was perfectly able to pay for it myself?
As I said, I am sympathetic to both arguments, so am uncomfortable whichever way I go.
@@SirFeat as a medical professional the extra salary would never be worth it due to being sued. Complications can arise no matter what and being part liable for that would just create a stressful work place an a lack of desire to learn new techniques. But that’s just me and a few others I know.
Hello my dear Family 🤗
Great video thank's for sharing.
You're most welcome! Glad you enjoyed it!
As a NZ Maori it's wonderful to hear you ladies speak so well of our country. Great videos just 1 wee gripe. Please don't talk over each other.
Thanks for your comment and feedback. 😉 We can't help it when we're together...we just feed off of each others energy.
Not all NZers will agree with me however, here’s a tip for yourself, others whom have emigrated or those that wish to relocate here. There are 3 types/groups of Maori that you will encounter. Maori have been colonised and of course are very different compared to pre colonial times. Basically, Maori (aboriginal/indigenous) are Polynesians. Tribally they are very similar throughout the country but not exactly the same. Group 1- Confident in their own historical Maori and Western cultural knowledge. They also realise the vast differences and have the ability to learn from other cultures as well as teach other cultures. Group 2- Not confident enough in Maori historical knowledge but very confident in Western historical knowledge and therefore, when it comes to discussion and debates, most find themselves joining the majority be they Maori or not. Lastly Group 3- Many (for whatever reason) believes that the world owes them something therefore, they despise the system, the law and society in general as well as all other cultures including their own. They will have no problem in telling you or others (in more colourful language) to go back to where you come from if you don’t like it...
Please remember that we Maori are all similar but, we are not exactly the same. Noho ora mai.
Housing housing housing. A basic 3 bedroom home in Wellington is 1.3 million. A run down dump is 950k.
Houses prices are going through the roof, around 3/4 of a Mil for an average house depending on where u live. Living costs are getting high, rent, power, food, petrol etc for the average income. NZ has a Methamphetimine problem atm, and gangs are becoming more prevalent. If you have a vehicle make sure it's legal, and your driving/parking is within the law at all times, or else it will cost you dearly in traffic fines. NZ has hidden speed cameras everywhere which catch drivers travelling over the speed limit, issuing instant traffic fines which get sent to you by mail
Yes this is all correct. I received a ticket in the mail. 😳
True
Yip and rent is at criminally high levels, the richest people in NZ pay lower taxes than the poorest people (it was reported recently), we are a renowned tax haven for the rich (so called elite). We have one of the highest rates of suicide per capita in the world, highest rates of depression.... but it's not all bad news, we make one of the nicest ice creams in the southern hemisphere.
There's a margin of error taken into consideration for exceeding the speed limit except during holiday periods when there is zero tolerance.
You forgot to mention how a lot of people here whine about every little inconvenience 😂
Aww beautiful to hear you felt welcome in El Salvador! I'm Salvadorean, but looking for another country to leave temporally while violence issues improve here! Thanks for the video, Big Hug!
I'm so sorry to hear that it's hard with violence in your country as I know the majority of the people there are so wonderful and loving. All the best to you with finding a nice safe place you can call home.
Nice vid
I'd like to know more about the skiing in the winter and mtb trails and costs etc
Lolol love you two so funny listening to Americans talk about what we’re like lolol cute
The dark haired lady is Canadian, not American. Not the same thing.
Theres some paru places in NZ lol but overall it is my home and glad to say it. Overall Beautiful
Lol! true
I'm from Gisborne NZ. Yay.. I nearly died when I had to visit a doctor in Ohio usa & Alaska us!!!! Wth & then I needed to pay for the prescriptions. So grateful for universal Healthcare in nz. GRATEFUL. 😊
The minimum wage is 20 dollars NZ an hour which is about 15 dollars usa an hour
Isn't it going up to $22 soon? 🧡
This is a very idealized portrayal of New Zealand.
Long story short, my occupation allows me to work just about anywhere & I've always wanted to experience NZ while I'm young & able. I just don't know how to go about it and began getting realistic about my move as of early May. I've narrowed it down to Wellington & Auckland, but I'm open to other cities. I'm a young professional in my 20s & I'm just trying to gather as much information so I can take the appropriate steps to make this move possible by the end of the year God willing. Also, what's the current state in the country? As far as C-19 goes. Any feedback would be highly appreciated! Tysm for reading up to here! Hope to hear from somebody out there.
Moving here with Covid is really unlikely, until 2022 when just about every kiwi will be vaccinated. Check the NZ immigration website, especially for the short list of jobs that are in demand. If your degree and or job experience is on that list, you will get a huge amount of points on the system they use. Speaking English, your age, a degree, good health, good character (ie no criminal stuff for a long time) all adds up. Some money in the bank helps too. One of the basic guidelines they follow is a test your not going to step off the plane and need state welfare. But that job/career short list really helps. Also: I wrote this elsewhere above, for international people under a certain age, I think it might be 30 or 35, there is a visa that allows a years work visa. Its specifically designed for young people and travelling, ie: itinerate work, such as working on a farm one week, take off and travel somewhere, get work in a bar in the next city, travel on again etc. That could be a perfect way for you to come experience the place, AND network your actual career for beyond the year, as in moving permanently. Good luck
C19 in nz isn't really an issue at all at the moment. You are free to wear mask or not. There are very few restrictions. It feels like life has gone back to normal here.
So nice to hear your perspective on us kiwis ladies and yes I'm guilty in the summer of running across the road from the beach to the supermarket in bear feet lol
Glad you enjoyed the videos! Sounds like a great relaxed way to live!!
Nawwe awesome vlog girlies👍😁 I have a "CON" visits to see the Vet is sooooo pricey😬 everywhere! Even if you only want to have your pet vaccinated or dewormed etc.... 🤦♀️ arrgh! Toooo expensive!😔
Thanks for sharing. Didn't think of this one since we don't have pets.
But vet care is expensive in all countries... unless it's 3rd world or a developing country .ie no vet care 😉
Really enjoyed your video and the humor.
Thanks glad you enjoyed the video!!😄
Whanau = "Far-No" 🥰
Ah thanks! That makes it easy to know how to pronounce it. 😉
But you pronounce the far as “Faah”
enjoyed the show WELL DONE
Yes, the ship of dreams has certainly sailed with out me for NZ. I'm less than two years away from retiring and know the cost to get there at my age is out of reach even though I will have a great retirement. I have talked to both of my sons about their chances though! One is about to get his PhD in Biology and the second is attempting to get into a Veterinarian program when he is finished with his Bachelors degree next year!! So I know they both could probably make the move if they wanted to.
I was in the US a few years ago. Our motel was next to a supermarket in LA, so I walked in and shopped around barefoot before the security guard came up to me and said i wasn't aloud to shop barefoot😁
You were probably like what?!? Why not?? 😂😂
Probably because they would be worried you may step on some glass or something and do yourself an injury making them liable to be sued.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders yea caught me off guard at first😊
Us Kiwis also leave our cars unlocked. I leave my car unlocked if I'm doing a quick 5-10min shopping at the mall or supermarket👍
@@harrycurrie9664 yea that's what the guard said actually.
I know. This is unheard of in most places in the world.
listening to you makes me proud to be a kiwi
OK guys, we're loving having you. The word isn't just Maori, it has a different rhythm. It may read as 2 syllables but pronounced 3. Mar o ri with a roll on the 3rd.
Ok. Re al ly with a roll on the third. Depends where you come from.
Yeah...we're still trying to get the names of certain towns pronounced correctly.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders To be fair people who have lived here their entire lives still can't do that with 100% accuracy.
Watching from Paducah, Kentucky.
Cool!
I'm a Kiwi who travelled through Tennessee, Kentucky. Stayed on a houseboat on a lake & camped in the Blue Mountains where I saw my first bear & played horseshoe throwing! I loved it & it reminded me of NZ. Green & Beautiful. The people were lovely too, I have so many fantastic memories of the places & people. It was my favourite area in the US :)
Well done girls. I will be following you both so keep up the good work. With love from a kiwi overseas
Thanks Paul!🙌🤩
Exactly...a kiwi overseas...
Yeah, leaving your door unlocked is very common here. Like, people still do get burgled on occasion, but most burglars are either career criminals who don't care about your locks or meth-heads who also don't care about your locks. You don't really get people opportunistically stealing your stuff because you left the door unlocked. Unless it's a car. Make sure you lock your car. People will strip your car clean if they find it unlocked. 😂
As someone who's only known the NZ school system, it was interesting to hear and realise that the outdoor-oriented layout of our schools is quite remarkable. I went to four different primary schools across the North Island, and they all had the same core layout of a central quad with 3-4 blocks of classrooms around the outside, so for most classrooms there was always two walls with windows and no indoor corridors between them. Having a suitable lesson outside in the quad or on the field wasn't uncommon, as it was easy for the teacher to get us out and back in again. It makes you feel so much more connected to the outside and less like you're cooped up indoors, especially if you have to switch rooms which we usually did for maths lessons. It was the same at my intermediate school albeit with extra blocks scattered around, and you got even more fresh air as the room switching increased to prepare you for secondary school. My secondary school had larger classroom blocks and those had indoor corridors, but it was always the same subject along a given corridor so you typically still had to go outside whenever you went to your next class.
The focus on public speaking never occurred to me either; getting up and speaking in front of the class about a topic was very common from the beginning, whether it was just a quick story about what you did in the weekend or a fully researched presentation about something the class was studying. I remember when I was nearly 8yo, we had to research and speak about our favourite animal, with each class choosing one person to repeat their presentation before the entire school assembly. I chose cicadas, which I don't think was quite the intent but I've always been obsessed with them (people often hate the racket they make, but to me it's the music of summer) so I put a lot of effort into researching everything about them for my presentation, which was chosen to be repeated before the school.
Wanting to inspire everyone to love cicadas as much as I did, I insisted upon dragging my mother throughout the neighbourhood in search of moulted cicada shells to collect and use as visual aids for the assembly. I was adamant that we collect enough cicada shells so that everyone at the assembly could have one to look at, which took the entire weekend as it was already March and by then many of the shells had already blown away and the cicadas were starting to die off. It was a little embarrassing for my mother, who was left with the task of explaining the situation and politely asking everyone in the neighbourhood if we could hunt through their yards, though everyone was more than happy to oblige and some even offered to help. We ended up with two entire plastic bags (yes, though were the days) full of cicada shells, which proved to be more than enough and became quite the hassle for all the teachers who I co-opted into handing them out while I was giving the presentation.
In the end, my dream of inspiring everyone to love cicadas came true, though, and many of the other kids were coming up to me afterwards asking if they could take home some of the leftover shells to play with and start their own collection. Such a positive experience with public speaking reinforced to me the value and importance of communication skills, and I think it left quite an impression on me given my young age, so I've never had any reservations about public speaking ever since (which is just as well, because they make you do speeches like that all the way up to and through secondary school). It's only just now, though, watching this video, that I've come to realise how much I've taken our education system for granted and how lucky I am that it gave me so many opportunities for personal development and growth. At the time, it was just an ordinary school to me, but hearing someone speak about it so highly has made me even more thankful for our uplifting culture and humanistic values here in Aotearoa New Zealand, and led me to appreciate how much a life can be changed by something so small and so simple as an empty cicada shell.
You just wrote an entire novel about cicadas wtf!
I live in Auckland and it has never occurred to me to lock my car lol
I don't know anyone in Auckland who would be so stupid to leave a car unlocked.
@@maxineb9598 Where I live (Whangarei) youd be really stupid to leave your house/car unlocked. If you do you WILL get robbed period!
@@floydkingi4364 We had an outboard motor stolen from our secured garden shed while we were away. They had to get it over a solid meter and a half wall.We live in Central Rotorua, one block from shops and businesses. Funny thing was, the outboard hadnt been used for over 25 years since we lived at KohuKohu.
As a kiwi I love that school work is a option for children it saves so much time
Glad you are here, welcome home!!!!
Thank-you! 💕
I think one of our biggest negatives is the quality of housing. We live in a country thats pretty cold in the winter and hot in the summer but so many houses still don't have insulation. Heating is subpar and expensive to run. No central heating unless you're fancy. I've lived in my fair share of cold, damp, mouldy homes 😩
Oh yes this is no fun. We’ve stayed in both homes that we’re freezing cold in the winter here and beautiful homes with in floor heating so I hear you. Especially if they’re damp then you really feel the cold.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders sometimes it does feel like we live 50 years behind other countries 😂 but I still wouldn't want to live anywhere else and we're very fortunate that we've been able to build a nice warm, dry new house
I love this duo!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Wellington to Auckland may be a long drive and rail services are very limited, but there are frequent and inexpensive flights between the two cities, as there are to all the other major population centres.
I would love to ask, how do you feel about your childrens overall intergration and development into kiwi culture, and with your children learning Te Reo Maori at school. Love the videos you have good points of topic keep it up
Another of racism in nz
@@ramonamaulio9456 wow - that makes sense.....
When my Canadian father married my Kiwi mother in 1992, he read a little fun factoid that said NZ was top 10 for dangerous driving in the world. My mother who grew up in that setting still to this day accelerates down a road and doesn't naturally follow the speed limit. When I was visiting for the first time to NZ in spring of 2001, we were almost run off the road going around a corner by another driver who was in our lane, cutting the corner, to save time. I think when I was around 12 on a visit that I saw ads for the first time on the TV telling drivers to slow down. And they were some good ads! I still vividly remember one of them. It was after this point that I could tell that NZ was starting to have safer drivers. Anyway, so even though getting a ticket for going a couple of kilometers above the speed limit is SUPER annoying, knowing how bad it used to be and the mentality that was baked into Kiwi's about speed, I'm glad to see such aggressive tactics.
That’s a crazy story. Whatever they’re doing is working because I don’t seem to notice too many speedy drivers and we’ve done many drives throughout the whole country. They do have signs everywhere though that say slow down or warning signs for ice patches on some of the windy roads so this must be helping too.
Oceans and mountains in the same place and beautiful scenery. Never heard of Vancouver?
Yeah I heard Vancouver is beautiful but not sure you can compare a whole country to BC...Wait till you see all our upcoming videos on NZ to see what I mean. I've never seen a country like this and we've been to 100 so far.
I was in Vancouver but only as a small child so I don't remember much...will have to go back one day bc it's probably the closest thing in CDN to NZ.
@@GrowingUpWithoutBorders I'm sure NZ is beautiful. Just being a patriotic Canuck, you know. Staying true to the home team and all that. Anyways, I hope you and your family enjoy your time there.
There is generally a 10% allowance for traveling over the speed limit in NZ and this applies to cameras as well.
During busy periods such as public holidays this is sometimes reduced to 4 km over (but it has no beneficial effect on the road toll)
The rule changed recently to be more strict. Google it.
The reason everything is always green isn't because of temperature it's because our forests are majority evergreen.
Ferns are like pine trees, they *do not* drop their leaves in autumn, even if you like, transported them to Antarctica or something.
Also we have a lot of pine tree forestry too.
I think there's only *one* species of native tree which drops it's leaves in autum.
That’s amazing! I never thought of that. Thanks for sharing something new and enlightening us. 😂😂