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Destinations: New Zealand Godzone Quest There's something about New Zealandand it's not just the soaring mountains, the red-hot culture, or the world-class Kiwi wines. STEPHANIE PEARSON goes in search of the adventure gene that inspires four million enlightened souls and makes NZ's islands a heaven for travelers. By Stephanie Pearson
To the north is one of the most recognizable contemporary movie locations on earth: the wide-open, tussocky flats of Twizel, site of the climactic Battle of Pelennor Fields in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, the final
These crumply-nosed, curly-horned, taupe-colored, kinky-haired merinos are the toughest of New Zealand's 40 million sheep, enduring high elevation, scorching summers, and brutal winters. (Last April, a wily merino the Kiwi media dubbed Shrek became famous when he was found hiding out in a cave, having evaded a shearing for six years. The woolly fugitive was lugging around 60 pounds of fleeceabout 50 pounds extrabefore he was apprehended and trimmed.) The reason I'm flirting with hypothermia in 46-year-old rancher Hugh Cameron's doorless helicopter is because the fleece of these Otematata Station merinos is destined to be raw material for some of the hippest technical garments of the new millennium. It was back in the mid-nineties that Jeremy Moon, a canny entrepreneur from Wellington, figured out that the soft, smooth merino wool could be transformed into the ultimate all-natural, insulated, breathable fabric. Today Moon's company, Icebreaker, is the largest manufacturer of outdoor clothing in Australia and New Zealand, and exports its all-merino products to 17 other countries, including the United States. I first met Moon, 35, at a swank dinner celebrating the world premiere of The Return of the King last December, in Wellington's harborside Museum Te Papa Tongawera. He regaled me with tales of the wild, remote landscapes and rugged chopper-pilot farmers that produce his wool. Later I flipped through Icebreaker's cataloga high-concept visual feast selling organic style and explorationand opened it to a photo of a woman splashing under a waterfall and the words "100-percent pure" and "It's about our relationship to nature and to each other." It dawned on me that Icebreaker's alluring blend of authentic value and clever marketing is a remarkable reflection of what New Zealand has come to represent to the world. If you've ever met a Kiwi, you'll understand. At the risk of stereotyping four million people, most Kiwis have a laid-back, endlessly optimistic "she'll be right, mate" way of attacking challenges. "We're mellow and down to earth, with a wicked competitive streak," Allan Uren, 40, one of the country's top mountaineers, told me. "And we're pretty nice, because you can't be an asshole in a country this size." Kiwis are game to give virtually anything a go, whether it's perfecting a grape varietal, climbing Everest, or taking a two-year OE ("overseas experience") hiatus in their twenties to see how the rest of the planet lives. From sport and travel to business and culture, New Zealand's traditional strengths have been infused with 21st-century verve and advertised with a global reach. Now everyone wants a piece of the Kiwi magic. I went on a monthlong mission to find out why.
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