High country (New Zealand)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Lakes Alexandrina and Tekapo
in the northern Mackenzie Basin.

In New Zealand, high country is a term for the elevated pastoral land of the South Island and – to a lesser extent – North Island.[1] This terrain, which can be compared loosely with the outback of Australia, high veldt of South Africa and pampas of Argentina, lies in the rain shadow of the country's mountain ranges and tends to be extensively farmed land with a continental climate consisting of low rainfall, cold winters and hot summers. Livestock farmed in these regions include sheep and – increasingly – deer and alpaca, and a major ground-covering plant of the area is tussock.

Regions of New Zealand closely associated with the high country include

glaciation from the last ice age, with deep finger-shaped lakes such as Lake Wānaka and Lake Tekapo
.

The South Island's high country was featured extensively in the

Rohan
.

References

Further reading