Hawke's Bay Today

Hawke’s Bay gets a holiday rush

- Hamish Saxton Hamish Saxton is the chief executive of Hawke’s Bay Tourism

At a time when the effects of Covid-19 are still felt by our visitor economy, the school holidays provide muchneeded foot traffic across the region.

School holidays are always valuable to domestic tourism, however, this year they could very well be a game-changer for many of our local operators. The current school holidays are the first period of consolidat­ed travel since New Zealand moved into lockdown in late March, and gratefully, many families are choosing to spend their time, and their money, in Hawke’s Bay.

New data from Wellington outfit Dot Loves Data and Eftpos New Zealand shows a marked increase in consumer spend right across Hawke’s Bay.

When compared to the same day last year, Eftpos New Zealand debit and credit card transactio­ns from July 7, 2020, were up by 14.1 per cent in Napier; 4.9 per cent in Hastings; 12.2 per cent in Central Hawke’s Bay; and 7.1 per cent in Wairoa. Nationwide, growth in consumer spend during the same period stalled at just 2.1 per cent.

Of course, this is full consumer spend and therefore captures expenditur­e from our local population as well. However, when you add this to operator data and anecdotal reports, the resulting picture is cautiously optimistic.

Dot Loves Data has labelled this the “halo effect”, where holiday destinatio­ns less than a four-hour drive away from large cities are doing well, despite the broader New Zealand picture being less optimistic.

The good news is that our region’s operators seem to concur, with many seeing an increase in visitors during the first week of the school holiday period.

Kennedy Park manager David Aflallo reports that school holiday bookings have increased from the same holiday period in 2019, with families travelling from Wellington, Wairarapa, Ka¯piti Coast and Bay of Plenty to make the most of the resort’s current Family Escape promotion.

Likewise, the National Aquarium has seen a significan­t 57.5 per cent increase on the same time last year, while MTG Hawke’s Bay, Par 2 MiniGolf and Napier i-SITE have all seen an upsurge in holidaying families during last week.

Central Hawke’s Bay’s Settlers Museum has also recorded an increase in people coming through the doors due to school holidays. This comes despite Covid-19 preventing the museum being able to prepare and showcase a school holiday exhibition as it typically would.

As with MTG Hawke’s Bay and the aquarium, the Settlers Museum’s interactiv­e activities are proving very popular with children.

Meanwhile, Havelock North’s Arataki Honey Visitor Centre has so far seen a 7 per cent increase in foot traffic when compared to the same holidays last year. Here, too, the centre’s activities are proving very popular, with candle-making and honey wrap-making tutorials on offer.

In fact, school holidays are putting an extra 50 per cent or more through the tills at Arataki Honey when compared to the weeks leading up to the holiday period.

At a time when the effects of Covid19 are still felt by our visitor economy, the school holidays provide muchneeded foot traffic across the region.

They are a well-timed window of opportunit­y for many operators, and hopefully the impact travels even further so that when the kids go to bed after a busy day on Bay-cation, their parents sit down to enjoy a lovely glass of Hawke’s Bay wine.

 ?? Photo / File ?? Eftpos New Zealand debit and credit card transactio­ns since July 7 were up by 14.1 per cent on the previous year in Napier.
Photo / File Eftpos New Zealand debit and credit card transactio­ns since July 7 were up by 14.1 per cent on the previous year in Napier.

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