Dunedin & Otago
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Photo Credit - Royal Albatross Centre
Dunedin & Otago – local resident population 118,683 approx.
The Otago province has a rich, exciting and cultural heritage along with dramatic landscapes and wonderful scenery for any traveller paying a visit.
Stretching from the Waitaki River in the north to below the Clutha River in the south, this is a vast, expansive area that is full of opportunities for discovery.
Dunedin has a strong Scottish history, rather than an English upbringing like its more northern cousin of Christchurch. You can easily recognise some of the architecture around the centre city- Dunedin has often been referred to as the Edinburgh of the South.
To the north of Dunedin are the famous Moeraki Boulders – believed to be over 60 million years old and well worth a visit! and to the South the start of the very famous Southern Scenic Route, that will take you through to the Catlins and into Southland, then onwards to the watery heart of Fiordland!
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The Cadbury World tour is a chocolate-lover’s dream that overwhelms the senses!
If you are short on time, why miss the fantastic sights we have in the South!
No visit to Dunedin would be complete without seeing the wildlife and scenery we are world renown for.
Located 33kms (50mins drive) from Dunedin on the tip of the Otago Peninsula, the Centre is the only mainland breeding colony of Royal Albatross in the world.
Dunedin, the home of Speight’s Brewery New Zealand’s most popular beer.






