
Formalties

Coming Here. Who can, and who
can't. Visas, passports , etc
Customs: The beady-eyed brigade
Ministry of Agriculture &
Fisheries. Prohibited imports.
On arrival
Duty free stuff.
Escaping from the airport.
All
visitors need a passport. Whether you can enter visa-free
or not depends on where you come from, how long you're
staying and what you want to do when you get here.
Let's take
the easiest case: The need for a visa will be waived if
you just want to come here for a holiday for up to three
months (UK = six months) and you are a citizen of any of
the following countries:
Australia,
Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark,
Finland, France. Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland,
Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Korea (South), Kiribati,
Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Malta, Monaco, Nauru,
Norway, Netherlands, Portugal*, Singapore, South Africa,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Tuvalu, USA**.
*Portuguese
passport holders must have the right to live permanently
in Portugal.
**
Includes US nationals from American Samoa and Swains
Island.
In order
to qualify for the visa waiver you must:
- hold
a valid ticket to a country to which you have a
valid right of entry, and have sufficient money
to support yourself during your stay, and
- hold a
passport valid for three months beyond the date
you are leaving New Zealand, and
- only
wish to visit NZ for the time granted on arrival
(if you wish to visit for a longer period you
will have to apply for a Visitor's Visa).
You can
get the official government information at http://www.immigration.govt.nz/
Changes
to student working policy
The
government has announced changes to immigration policy with the goal
of making it easier for international students to work and study in
New Zealand.
The
following changes will take effect from 4 July 2005:
Ø
International students who have graduated
from a course that would gain points under Skilled Migrant Category
will be eligible for a six-month open work permit.
Ø
The pool of students eligible to work part
time while studying will be expanded to include Year 12 and 13 school
students and some English language students, provided certain
conditions are met.
Ø
Eligible students will be able to apply to
work for up to 20 hours a week during term, instead of the current 15
hours.
Ø
Anyone undertaking a course of 12 months
or more will be able to apply to work full-time over the summer
holidays.
Ø
Partners of students studying in areas of
absolute skill shortage and partners of all postgraduate students will
be able to apply for an open work permit valid for the duration of the
student’s course of study.
For
further information go to www.immigration.govt.nz
Customs.
The NZ
Customs people are as flinty-eyed as any in the world. If
you have ideas of smuggling stuff take some advice: In a
word, don't. The justice system will solidly back the
Customs people and they hand out lengthy sentences -
especially for dope and endangered animal smugglers.
You may
import goods up to a value of $700 free of tax and duty.
Over that amount could cop either or both.
Ministry of Ag. & Fish..
New
Zealand is primarily an agricultural nation. A huge part
of our overseas income is earned from farming, forestry,
fishing and horticulture. One of the main appeals of the
place to travellers is its clean, green environment.
One of the
reasons we are so successful at primary production is
because, being so far away from the rest of this
poisoned, polluted, pest-ridden planet, we don't have
rank upon rank of nasties to fight. Many of the pests and
diseases that make life hell for overseas producers are
unknown here.
We are at
pains to keep it that way and that will mean a little
co-operation from you.
You will,
unknowingly, be fumigated as your aeroplane approaches
Auckland. Gone are the days when uniformed officers
marched up and down the aircraft with spray bombs held
high. You will also have to fill out a MAF declaration
stating whether you've been on a farm or similar in the
previous days.
Do
us a favour, mate, and don't lie about it.
Nobody is going to prohibit your entry or keelhaul you as
a consequence. They'll just want to wash your boots for
you.
You'll
also be asked to leave behind in special bins any food or
products of an animal origin. Again, don't be a
bloody idiot and try to slip it through.
Here's
what happens if you do: Not long ago some selfish,
self-centred ape brought fruit through the border,
concealed in some way. That fruit contained fruit fly. As
they drove away from the airport and passed near my house
they noticed that the fruit had a bug in it so they
tossed it out of the car window!!!!. The entire area
around Hillsborough where I live was sealed off while
they examined every tree and sprayed everything and
everybody. That went on for months.
But that's
nothing compared to what happened on the other side of
Auckland. Somehow a moth - the white-spotted tussock moth
- got established in the Eastern Suburbs. This hungry
little monster would make moth tucker of our extremely
valuable forests and with no predators would spread
rapidly. To prevent further spread of the creature, the
MAF people used a DC6 aeroplane to spray an area about
10km square every few days. So, just after dawn residents
were treated the to drone of low-level bombing runs for
weeks on end.
More
recently the same thing happened on the other side of the
city. And the spraying still goes on.
And then
there's the cost of these little exercises. Gizzillions
of dollars that could have been used in hospitals or
schools, down the drain because of stupid, selfish bloody
idiots.
So, again,
do us a favour, mate. Leave the fruit and other
foodstuffs at the gate. Besides, the food you'll buy here
is cheap, fresh and wonderfully free of pests and
pesticides.
Besides,
we have a great "real life" tv programme called
Border Patrol where smugglers are filmed at the airport and catches all
the clowns that try to beat the system. How would you like to look like
the drongo who hung a sausage down the inside of his
trousers to try to smuggle it in! Didn't he look
hilarious when about half a million people tuned in to
watch . . .
Trust me, it is not the
sort of holiday video you want.
On arrival . . .
So what
will happen on arrival? On the aeroplane you'll be asked
to fill out the usual sort of arrival card and a customs
and agricultural declaration.
On the
ground, into the terminal and first comes the inevitable
immigration counter. Quick check of the documentation,
quick comparison of you and your passport and, since
there is absolutely no resemblance between you and your
passport photograph, you're free to pass through.
Then the
customs people. We have the usual two lanes -
"nothing to declare" and "carrying
loot" . . . . well sort of.
Click here
or more information on Auckland
International Airport.
Duty free stuff. .
Don't load
yourself down with booze and cigarettes, perfume etc
before getting here. Take life easily and lightly. On
arrival at the airport, having cleared immigration you
enter a dazzling little shopping centre inside the
terminal. It's all there and you can pick it up, pop it
on the plastic and head off to the Customs counter.
Prices are as competitive as anywhere I've seen in the
world. Yeah, yeah, you might shave a buck or two on some
lines in some places, but there really isn't much in it.
Here's
some typical prices:
Cheap
cigarettes $23.00 per carton.
Standard cigarettes (eg Pall Mall) $27.90 carton
Premium cigarettes around $30 carton
Johnny Walker Red $26.50 1 litre bottle.
Glenfiddich $46.90 1l.
Black rum $16.90 1.125l
Bacardi $22 1.125l
Brandy $19.90 1.125l
Gin $15.90 to $17.90 1.125l
50ml
Chanel No 5 parfum spray $110.00
All
prices $NZ
Other than
booze and baccy there isn't a lot of excise duty or
tariffs on goods in NZ. Clothes and shoes a bit, maybe,
but not enough to worry about.
What you
will save by buying on the duty free side of the line is
GST (Goods & Service Tax) of 12.5% that is levied on
everything in this country.
Getting away from the airport.
No matter
where you arrive - Auckland, Wellington, or Christchurch
- your options are the same for getting away from the
airport and into your accommodation: Taxi, shuttle or
airport coach.
For my
money, the airport shuttles are the best option unless
you're in a hellava hurry, in which case pay triple and
take a cab. But otherwise, just make your way outside the
terminal building and you'll find a line of shuttle
coaches waiting. They are 10 seater mini-busses and
they'll take you door-to-door for a fraction the cost of
a cab.
Typical
airport-to-city costs: Auckland $18, Wellington and
Christchurch $13.
If you are staying at a downtown hotel or
hostel, the airporter coaches are a slightly slower but
similarly slightly cheaper option.
In Auckland a taxi to the city will cost
around $40-50 depending on the time of day and therefore
the traffic delays. But beware - if the traffic is
seriously delayed you can get horrific bills. I heard of
one cab that cost $140 because it took two hours to reach
the city. May pay to sort that out with the driver first.
In Wellington a cab to the city will cost around $40.
Updated 13 May 2005
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Home Page
All you need to know about a visit to the
place where God set the contrast and colour and man
hasn't fiddled with the dials.
Introduction
What, hopefully, you'll get out of this
mish-mash of peripatetic ramblings.
General Information
Background bumpf on the country.
Getting In
Visas, customs, immigration, duty free
shopping, and getting away from the airport. Bloody
important if you don't want to be arrested on arrival.
Getting Around
Moving on . . . by road or rail, by air or
by sea.
Accommodation
"nuff said.
The Regions
What to see, what to do, why to go there.
Special Interests
Diving, fishing, golf, rafting, sailing,
skiing - and more.
Home Page
All you need to know about a visit to the
place where God set the contrast and colour and man
hasn't fiddled with the dials.
Introduction
What, hopefully, you'll get out of this
mish-mash of peripatetic ramblings.
General Information
Background bumpf on the country.
Getting In
Visas, customs, immigration, duty free
shopping, and getting away from the airport. Bloody
important if you don't want to be arrested on arrival.
Getting Around
Moving on . . . by road or rail, by air or
by sea.
Accommodation
"nuff said.
The Regions
What to see, what to do, why to go there.
Special Interests
Diving, fishing, golf, rafting, sailing,
skiing - and more.
Home Page
All you need to know about a visit to the
place where God set the contrast and colour and man
hasn't fiddled with the dials.
Introduction
What, hopefully, you'll get out of this
mish-mash of peripatetic ramblings.
General Information
Background bumpf on the country.
Getting In
Visas, customs, immigration, duty free
shopping, and getting away from the airport. Bloody
important if you don't want to be arrested on arrival.
Getting Around
Moving on . . . by road or rail, by air or
by sea.
Accommodation
"nuff said.
The Regions
What to see, what to do, why to go there.
Special Interests
Diving, fishing, golf, rafting, sailing,
skiing - and more.
|