BONJOUR!
For New Zealanders and Australians, New Caledonia is as close as you can get for a tropical island getaway. Just two and a half hours out from Auckland, the Mainland, Isle of Pines and Loyalty Islands of New Caledonia offer a unique blend of French and Melanesian cultures. Discover the magnificent dive sites, bush walking tracks, and fantastic sailing and surf spots as well as the restaurants and nightlife of the capital Noumea, which caters to all tastes and budgets.



The great voyaging canoes of the Melanesian people sailed into NEW CALEDONIA two or three thousand years ago. But it was Captain Cook who named the land when he arrived there en route to New Zealand in 1774. NEW CALEDONIA was claimed as French territory by Admiral Febvrier-Despointes in September 1853, which rapidly led to hundreds of French settlers making the islands their home. Thousands of convicts were also deported there, and many remnants of that era can still be seen today. In the 1890s migrants from Indonesia and Java arrived, adding another element to the country’s cultural diversity.
Once the French had claimed NEW CALEDONIA in 1853, the new settlers European influence merged with the deeply rooted Pacific lifestyle, leading to the country’s unique identity today. The climate and location holds the relaxed and friendly beauty of the South Pacific, yet the main spoken language is French and the shopping, restaurants and nightlife feel distinctly European. The Indonesian and Javanese immigrants who came to work in NEW CALEDONIA’s copper, cobalt and nickel mines, add another ingredient to the cultural mix. 