•
Rowing • 1969.
Anders Svedlund attempted a crossing from New Zealand to Australia, however he was over-turned five days after leaving from
Auckland's Manukau Harbour and returned to New Zealand. • 1977.
Colin Quincey, an England-born New Zealander, made the first successful human-powered trans-Tasman crossing. He took 63 days 7 hours to row his Yorkshire Dory row-boat from
Hokianga, New Zealand to
Marcus Beach on the
Sunshine Coast of Australia. • 2007. Four Australians, led by Steven Gates, departed from
Hokianga, New Zealand on 29 November. They arrived in Sydney Harbour on 30 December at 8:15 am, having taken 31 days to make the crossing. • 2010. Shaun Quincey completed the solo row from Australia to New Zealand in March 2010. Shaun is the son of Colin Quincey, who completed the reverse journey in 1977. • 2012. A team of five made a west–east crossing of the Tasman. Departed Sydney on 27 November 2011 in the boat
Moana, arriving in Auckland on 20 January 2012. The team included James Blake, the son of
Peter Blake. One of the crew – Martin Berka – had been dropped off at the
Bay of Islands, as the boat made its way to Auckland. •
Kayaking • 2018. Scott Donaldson completed the first solo kayak solo crossing in July 2018, travelling from
Coffs Harbour, Australia to
Lord Howe Island, and then onto
New Plymouth, New Zealand. He was resupplied en route. • 2023. Richard Barnes made the first non-stop, unassisted, unsupported solo crossing by kayak. He departed
Hobart,
Tasmania on 14 December 2022, arriving 67 days later at
Riverton,
Southland, on 18 February 2023. ==See also==