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  1. The first hotel appeared in Milford Sound around 1890, when famed Scotsman, Donald Sutherland, and his wife Elizabeth Samuel, constructed simple lodgings for those hardy enough to visit the fiord and its walking tracks. A considerable task at the time, given there was no road access, no power and they were operating in one of the wettest places ...

  2. The hermit of Milford Sound and the start of the tourist trade. The first European settler in Milford Sound was Donald Sutherland, a Scottish explorer. He made his home at the bottom of Bowen Falls, making the most of the view of Mitre Peak. The three huts he built after arriving in 1877 became known as the ‘City of Milford’.

  3. www.milford-sound.co.nz › about › milford-sound-historyMilford Sound History

    Milford Sound history begins a long time ago, back when all of New Zealand was an unspoiled land of forest and mountains, rivers and sea. Māori people living in the South Island discovered Milford Sound more than 1,000 years ago. Tribes would travel there to fish and hunt around the fiord, and to collect precious pounamu.

  4. Nov 14, 2017 · John Grono, a Welsh sealing captain, named the Milford Sound after his birthplace Milford Haven. The sound was given as Piopiotahi by the Maori after the thrush-like and extinct Piopio bird. From the Tasman Sea at Dale Point, the sound runs 15 kilometers and is surrounded on both sides by rock faces rising 3,900 feet or more. The sound has two ...

    • Joseph Kiprop
  5. A fiord is often steep and narrow. New Zealand’s 14 fiords are all found in the South Island and are vast coastal inlets of water created by glacial movement. Around 15,000 – 75,000 years ago, glaciers made their way down the mountains to the sea. As the glacier melted or retreated, the sea flooded the valley left behind.

  6. Apr 25, 2018 · Milford Sound goes one step further than that by being the wettest inhabited place in New Zealand, as well as one of the wettest places in the world. The area gets an average of 182 days of rainfall a year – over the course of 24 hours, this often means 250 millimetres (9.84 inches) of water pouring out of the skies. Not that this is a bad thing.

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  8. Aug 2, 2022 · Early European settlers named the area for its geographic features, but they made a mistake in doing so. A sound is formed when a river valley gets flooded by the sea. But Milford Sound was carved out of glacial erosion – thus making it a fiord, not a sound. 6. Piopiotahi is the Māori name for Milford Sound.

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