About the Legend of Paradise

Certainly, no other word but paradise could match the rugged natural splendour of the surrounding landscape. It has been home to the Paradise duck since time immemorial. When you hold their rich feathers up to the light they shine a brilliant green.

These gentle ducks illustrate a love story as old as the valley itself. When two birds find each other they share a lifelong partnership. Today, their bright feathers are identified with the sanctuary of romantic seclusion found on the doorstep of Paradise.

The name, Blanket Bay, recalls the events a century ago when pioneer farmers from Europe sheared their sheep on the shore of our Bay under rough shelters stitched together from blankets. In 1861, a mob of sheep owned by Mr William Gilbert Rees were sheared on the shore of Lake Wakatipu, in a bay just south of where the small town of Glenorchy is situated. This bay was to be named Blanket Bay after blankets used to create the shed and shelters used to protect the eight Maori shearers and the wool from the elements.

The Legend of Paradise
The Legend of Paradise
The Legend of Paradise

 

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