Legendary Black Water Rafting Black Labyrinth

Waikato
All year round

New Zealand’s maximum-adrenaline Black Water Rafting tour

After checking in and meeting your friendly and passionate guides, it’s time to gear up and test out your tubing skills. Once you’re comfortable in your tube, you’ll enter the cave through a hole in the rock and head straight into the underground waters. Spend the next three hours weaving around and climbing over rocks, jumping off not-too-high waterfalls, floating beneath a sky of glowworms, and most importantly, having the most fun you’ve ever had in the dark!

Cost?

Yes

For more info visit:

Legendary Black Water Rafting Black Labyrinth

Address

584 State Highway 3
Waitomo

Contact

0800 228 464

blackwater.rafting@waitomo.com

More experiences like this

Whānau Mārama: New Zealand International Film Festival 2023

Auckland
19/07/2023 -6/08/2023

The NZIFF 2023 programming team attends film festivals around the world to bring audiences in Aotearoa the very best of global cinema, with the Auckland programme featuring 129 full-length films and seven short film collections, with films hailing from 39 countries, including Uganda, Senegal, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of Congo, Estonia, Jordan, Iran, Brazil, and of course Aotearoa. The films will screen in six venues and cinemas in Auckland from 19 July to 6 August with the festival rolling out to 15 regions across the motu. The 2023 programme comprises features, Cannes Film Festival winners, documentaries, shorts, retrospectives, films for kids, animation, and the ‘incredibly strange’. Nine films are celebrating their world premiere and all films are making their New Zealand premiere at NZIFF 2023.

FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023™

Auckland, Dunedin, Hamilton, Wellington

The 2023 Fifa Women’s World Cup in New Zealand and Australia will be on a huge scale. It’s set to become the most-attended women’s sporting event in history, with over a million tickets already sold.

Matariki 2023

Nationwide
Observed 14/07/23

Matariki is a time where people, whānau, and communities gather together to remember the year that has passed, to celebrate the present, and to plan for the next year. It is a time to remember our loved ones who are no longer with us, to feast and celebrate with our relatives and friends, and to look towards the future and the hope of a season full of bounty.

Back to top