9:30 am today

How an odd idea to swim with dolphins set up a 36-year business

From Nine To Noon, 9:30 am today
Images of the early years of Dolphin Encounter.

Photo: Dolphin Encounter

It's not that long ago that spotting a whale or dolphin up close in New Zealand waters was a game of chance - usually from your own boat.

But in the summer of 1990 Kaikoura-based Ian Bradshaw and Rik Buurman had an idea - why not take people to see dolphins and swim with them?

They worked with DoC on getting New Zealand's first dolphin swimming and watching permit - and their first boat, a six-metre catamaran called the Dolphin Mary started taking tourists to see the mammals.

A year later Rik's brother Dennis and wife Lynette came aboard - and the company was renamed Dolphin Encounter.

The company's been operating now for 36 years - but in the last month, the group made the difficult decision to sell.

However Dolphin Encounter will keep operating - it's been sold to another local company, Banks Peninsula eco-tourism pioneers Black Cat Cruises.

Lynette and Dennis Buurman join Kathryn to talk about their ground-breaking tourism operation, why the time was right to pass the business on. 

The outgoing partners in the business, Ian Bradshaw and Dennis and Lynette Buurman.

Photo: Supplied: Dennis Buurman