The Post

Australian­s eager to

- Blair Jackson

Australian­s are snapping up spots on the Milford Track and bookings were ‘‘trickling’’ into Te Anau ahead of the trans-Tasman bubble opening.

The first trans-Tasman flights under the bubble arrangemen­t land in New Zealand today now that travellers between the countries no longer have to quarantine.

Te Anau’s Anchorage Motel co-owner Nigel Humphries said a trickle of Australian­s had made bookings in the town.

The tourism-reliant town has been particular­ly hurt by border closures, which began in early 2020.

Humphries believed it would be lots of friends and families travelling across the Tasman Sea initially.

Bookings would represent ‘‘some off-shoot’’ of that, but ‘‘not a massive wave’’, Humphries said. ‘‘There is a lot of uncertaint­y because a lot of us don’t know how to plan for winter.’’

He said there were lots of package deals on offer in Queenstown at the moment, and when asked if Te Anau needed to be offering more deals, he said many operators already had them.

‘‘Prices are very competitiv­e because we have a lot to come back from,’’ Humphries said.

He described the mood among tourism operators as cautious optimism.

However, he said that from a personal perspectiv­e, ‘‘there’s disbelief this is actually happening’’.

April had been the best month in Te Anau since lockdown and the border closure a year ago, and speaking generally across operators, business was down 50 to 70 per cent compared to April 2019.

‘‘There’s light at the end of the tunnel,’’ Humphries said.

Fiordland Outdoors Company owner Christine Wallace had

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