Gisborne
is the principal city and port of the Poverty Bay and East Coast region,
north of Hawke’s Bay, with a population of ab
out 31,500 in the town and
44,000 within the boundaries of the Gisborne District
Council, set up in
1989 to replace the city council and give the local authority an expanded
area. Surrounded by mountain ranges on three sides and served by a port
that takes vessels of limited size, Gisborne is physically the most
isolated city in the country. It is built on a rich alluvial delta and has
a mild, sunny climate (2,215 hours of sunshine a year on average),
temperatures ranging from -2oC in winter to more than 30oC in summer, and an annual average rainfall of 1,079 mm.
The
city services an area in which hill country farming predominates, but
there is dairying and cropping on the flats with vegetable and
fruit-growing.
The
region is rich in early history. Young Nick’s Head is named after
Nicholas Young, surgeon’s boy on the Endeavour and the first
member of the crew to sight the country on 7 October 1769. There is a
memorial at the foot of Kaiti Hill, in Gisborne, to the arrival on land
there of James Cook on 9 October 1769. On the top of the hill stands an
astronomical observatory and statue of Cook, put there to mark the
bicentenary of his rediscovery of NZ.