The Cooee South Island Journal

Te Waka o Māui
South Island Guides

Fiordland, the Southern Alps, the Mackenzie Basin, Marlborough’s vines and the West Coast glaciers — the South Island contains more extraordinary landscape per kilometre than almost anywhere on Earth. The complete guides for Australians crossing the Tasman.

3,724m
Aoraki / Mt Cook
14
Fiords in Fiordland
750km
State Highway 6
4.8/5
Our Review Score

The World’s Greatest Scenic Island

The South Island of New Zealand — Te Waka o Māui in te reo Māori — is 151,000 square kilometres of argument that the Earth saved its most dramatic work for the bottom of the Pacific. The Southern Alps run the length of the island like a spine, their western faces catching the Tasman rain and feeding glaciers that calve into rainforest. On the eastern side, the land opens into the Canterbury Plains, the Mackenzie Basin’s turquoise lakes and the wine country of Central Otago. In the far south, Fiordland’s 14 fiords are so remote that most of them have no road access at all.

For Australians, the South Island is New Zealand’s primary draw — and the self-drive circuit from Christchurch through Kaikoura, Marlborough and Nelson down the West Coast to Queenstown, then east through the Mackenzie Basin and back to Christchurch is one of the world’s genuinely great road trips. The challenge is not finding things to do but deciding what to prioritise in the time available. The region guide below is designed to help you make that call.

South Island Regions at a Glance

Eight distinct regions, each with a different character. Use this to build your itinerary:

RegionGatewayBest ForAllowDon’t Miss
Marlborough & Nelson Picton / Blenheim Wine, Sounds, Abel Tasman 3–4 days Marlborough Sounds sea kayak; Sauvignon Blanc cellar doors; Abel Tasman Coast Track
Kaikoura Kaikoura Whale watching, fur seals, crayfishing 1–2 days Sperm whale watching (year-round); swimming with dusky dolphins (Oct–Apr)
Christchurch & Canterbury Christchurch Gateway, post-quake culture, Banks Peninsula 2–3 days Ōtākaro / Avon River Precinct; Lyttelton Harbour; Akaroa French village
Aoraki / Mt CookUnmissableScenic Flights Lake Tekapo / Mt Cook village Alpine, glaciers, stargazing 1–2 days Hooker Valley TrackFree (glacial lake, 3 hr return); Tekapo Stargazing (Dark Sky Reserve)
West Coast Hokitika / Franz Josef Glaciers, rainforest, Pancake Rocks 2–3 days Fox Glacier & Franz Josef heli-hike; Hokitika Gorge; Pancake Rocks at Punakaiki
QueenstownUnmissable Queenstown Adventure, wine, skiing, gateway to Fiordland 3–5 days Remarkables skiing (winter); Dart River; Gibbston Valley wine; Fergburger
FiordlandUnmissable Te Anau Milford Sound, Doubtful Sound, Milford Track 2–3 days Milford Sound overnight cruise; Doubtful Sound (quieter alternative); Milford Track (book 8 months ahead)
Central Otago Wanaka / Cromwell Pinot Noir, cycling, dramatic landscapes 2–3 days Otago Central Rail Trail; Bannockburn wine; Lake Wānaka’s That Wanaka Tree
3 hrsChristchurch from Sydney
Inter­islandFerry Wellington–Picton
Self‑DriveBest Way to Explore
10–14 daysRecommended Minimum
Coming 2026 22 min read

South Island 14-Day Self-Drive Itinerary

The definitive South Island road trip — Christchurch to Kaikoura, Marlborough, Nelson and Abel Tasman, south down the West Coast past the glaciers, through Wanaka to Queenstown, across to Fiordland for Milford Sound, back east through the Mackenzie Basin and Aoraki/Mt Cook to Christchurch. Every driving distance, ferry booking, must-stop, and how to adjust for 7, 10 or 14 days.

Read Full Itinerary →

South Island Travel Guides

In-depth guides to the South Island’s major destinations and experiences — updated for 2026.

Fiordland Dramatic Milford Sound fjord with sheer cliff walls and still dark water at dawn
Coming 2026Planned

Milford Sound: Day Trip vs Overnight Cruise

The most visited place in New Zealand — and how you see it matters enormously. We compare the full-day coach return from Queenstown, the fly-drive option, and the overnight cruise that leaves you alone on the fiord after every day visitor has gone home.

Coming Soon
Queenstown Dramatic Remarkables mountain range reflected in Lake Wakatipu, Queenstown
Coming 2026Planned

Queenstown Complete Guide 2026

Beyond the bungee and the Fergburger — what Queenstown actually offers in each season: Remarkables and Coronet Peak skiing in winter, Dart River jetboating, Gibbston Valley Pinot Noir, the Routeburn Track, and why late autumn is the least-known best time to visit.

Coming Soon
Abel Tasman Kayakers on turquoise water between golden sand beaches and granite headlands, Abel Tasman
Coming 2026Planned

Abel Tasman National Park: Kayak, Walk or Both?

New Zealand’s smallest and most visited national park — golden sand beaches, granite headlands, fur seals and the 51-km Abel Tasman Coast Track. Water taxis, kayak day trips, guided walks and multi-day options compared honestly so you can choose the right fit.

Coming Soon
West Coast Dramatic glacier surrounded by native rainforest and mountains on the West Coast of New Zealand
Coming 2026Planned

Fox Glacier & Franz Josef: West Coast Glacier Guide

Two of the world’s most accessible glaciers — rivers of ancient blue ice descending almost to rainforest level. The ground-level walks have been significantly reduced due to glacier retreat; the helicopter hike is now the only way to walk on the ice. This guide explains what’s possible, the cost, and whether the heli-hike is worth it.

Coming Soon
Marlborough Rows of grapevines stretching to the horizon in Marlborough wine country, South Island
Coming 2026Planned

Marlborough Wine Country & the Sounds

Marlborough produces roughly 80% of New Zealand’s wine and the world’s most replicated style of Sauvignon Blanc — but the best Marlborough experiences go deeper than cellar doors. The Marlborough Sounds by boat, Queen Charlotte Track, Cloudy Bay direct, Fromm’s Pinot Noir, and the seafood at Havelock. The complete Marlborough guide.

Coming Soon
Mackenzie Basin Turquoise glacial lake under dramatic snow-capped mountain, Aoraki Mount Cook region
Coming 2026Planned

Aoraki / Mt Cook & Lake Tekapo: Mackenzie Basin Guide

The Hooker Valley Track to the glacial terminal lake at the foot of Aoraki / Mt Cook (3 hours return, startlingly beautiful), the Church of the Good Shepherd at Tekapo, the International Dark Sky Reserve stargazing, and the turquoise lakes — Pukaki, Tekapo, Ohau — coloured by glacial flour. How to include the Mackenzie Basin in a South Island road trip.

Coming Soon
📝 The Cooee Travel Journal — Te Waka o Māui, South Island
Cooee Tours is based in Brisbane, Queensland, on the land of the Jagera and Turrbal peoples. Te Waka o Māui (the South Island of New Zealand) is the traditional territory of Ngāi Tahu (also written Kāi Tahu), who are the principal iwi of the South Island and hold manawhenua — customary authority — across most of Te Waka o Māui. Ngāi Tahu acknowledge the earlier peoples of this land, Waitaha and Ngāti Māmoe, who preceded them. We acknowledge the mana, the history, and the deep guardianship of Ngāi Tahu over these mountains, fiords, rivers, lakes and coasts, and pay our deepest respect to their past, present and future generations.