Friends build island to avoid New Year's Eve alcohol ban at New Zealand's Tairua estuary

Updated January 02, 2018 07:36:26

A group of friends came up with a creative plan to avoid a New Year's Eve alcohol ban, by building a makeshift island in coastal waters.

The ban was put in place at the Tairua estuary on the Coromandel Peninsula on New Zealand's north island in an attempt to curb excess drinking, but the group found a loophole.

Stuff.co.nz reports they built the island out of sand during a low tide on Sunday, and it was just big enough to fit a picnic table and an Esky.

Because the friends were in "international waters", they technically were excluded from the alcohol ban.

The alcohol ban covered the whole Coromandel area on New Year's Eve, and alcohol was not to be consumed at the beach or other public places.

'I probably would have joined them': police

People who ignored the ban could be fined $227, but local police commander Inspector John Kelly praised the makeshift island.

"That's creative thinking — if I had known that I probably would have joined them," he said.

Even Thames-Coromandel Mayor Sandra Goudie admired the idea.

"That's the one thing I absolutely love about the Coromandel — the inventive nature of the people," she told Stuff.

"It's about creativity; the legal reality is somewhat different."

The friends stayed on the island throughout the night, drinking alcohol and watching the fireworks.

The island was still standing on New Year's Day.

Onlooker David Saunders posted photos of the friends enjoying a chilly beverage to Facebook.

He told the BBC, "It was great to see some Kiwis having a bit of fun".

Topics: law-crime-and-justice, local-government, human-interest, offbeat, new-zealand

First posted January 02, 2018 07:34:30

  • Fireworks light up the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Sydney Opera House as part of new year celebrations on Sydney Harbour How blind people enjoyed the New Year's Eve fireworks

    By Angus Randall

    Watching the Sydney sky light up with fireworks was the highlight for the many last night — but what if you were blind?

  • Undated colour file photo of former Qld premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen KCMG 30-year old Queensland cabinet documents

    By Kristian Silva, Josh Bavas and staff

    Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen's political career ended in 1987, and the release of Queensland cabinet documents shed light on the former state premier's abrupt demise amid corruption allegations.

  • Still image of Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson inspecting a roadside memorial from 2017 film The Endless. New approach to cut death toll

    As our holiday road death toll climbs, perhaps it's time to stop attributing fatal accidents to inexperience, immaturity or even stupidity, and view the crashes as a failure in a system that should be protecting young drivers.

  • Top Stories

    Just In

    Most Popular

    Site Map

    Sections

    Local Weather

    Local News

    Media

    Subscribe

    Connect