Naked Family Naturist

Naked Family Naturist




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A BOAT full of naked passengers gatecrashed a couple's wedding anniversary after a nudists tour cruised by.
The couple having a romantic dinner got the shock of their lives when a boat full of naked people waved as they ate at a restaurant by a river.
John Wood, of Seawood Yachts, was at the River Exe Cafe enjoying a meal with his wife when a cruise ship of 'naturists' passed by, exposing them to some surprising sights.
The ship was operated by the naturist Torbay Sun Club as it conducted its annual ‘Nude Cruise’.
Members enjoy the cruise while completely naked, and are encouraged to interact with other fellow naturists onboard.
While most of the diners at the restaurant were amused to see the passengers in all their glory, some were concerned for their health due to the high winds that were blowing at the time.
John told Devon Live: "My wife and I were having a lovely anniversary dinner at the River Exe cafe when we caught sight of a boat full of naked people travelling slowly.
"Reaction in the restaurant was mostly of amusement, and concern for their health as the wind was getting up. Luckily that was the only thing that was!'
While many of us are familiar with the term ‘booze cruise’, the Exmouth ‘nude cruise’ has become something of an annual event on the calendar for the naturists of Torbay and beyond.
Each year, they embark on the Exmouth ‘nude cruise’ on a pleasure boat hired from local firm Stuart Line and each year the sight of naked people enjoying the views and partying from the deck below has aroused the attention of other boat users on the estuary.
Contrary to public opinion, being naked is not illegal, except for where it’s intended to cause alarm or distress.
The Torbay Sun Club, which describes itself as one of the UK’s largest naturist swim and sauna clubs catering for people of all ages and walks of life describes how it perceives naturism on its website.
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23 Dec, 2017 08:00 AM18 minutes to read
New Zealand is now a top destination for holidays without clothes. Made with funding from NZ On Air.
Matt, 30, is not a nudist but likes to play mini golf naked.
Sophie, 25, went skinny dipping and never put her clothes back on.
Mark, 47, was painfully shy and couldn't look in people's eyes until he discovered naturism - now the car mechanic looks forward to the end of the day when he takes off his boots and everything else.
Ellen, 53, grew up in a naturist family and now goes on 'nakations' all over the world.
Marie, 46, lives naked at home and on family outings and says the naturist lifestyle has instilled self-esteem in her three children.
Amina, 37, a former chef from Sweden, has opened a Tauranga cafe where people can enjoy her home baking naked.
Tom, 50, owns the only private holiday resort in the North Island for naturists.
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Glenne, 68, runs a Bay of Plenty naturist group which has 948 members.
Matt Nichols, 30, playing mini golf with his partner Sophie Proffitt, 25. Photo/John Borren
"I don't introduce myself, 'Hi my name's Matt, I'm a nudist'."
Matt Nichols, 30, is playing mini golf with his partner Sophie Proffitt, 25.
He's Canadian, she's English. They are both stark naked.
They are on 'nakation', the term for holidaying without clothes, at Katikati Naturist Park, the only private nudist park in the North Island and one of only two private naturist holiday resorts in New Zealand, although there are 17 landed clubs around the country.
The couple spotted a road sign pointing to the naturist park on the highway towards Tauranga, and turned down the 1.5km rural lane to discover the camp, set in 5.7 hectares of native bush alongside the Uretara stream.
It's their first time in a naturist camp.
"If you had asked me five years ago would I be in a place like this, I would have said no. To the outside, it may seem weird but it's really not. It's chill, relaxed."
There's an assumption that being naked around others is a sexual thing, he says.
"It is not about that at all. It is not about hooking up. We are not swingers or anything. Maybe when I am older."
Nichols first tried being naked among other people in California four years ago.
"Society tells us it is normal to wear clothes, but I like trying new things in life and experimenting as much as possible.
"At first, it was nerve-racking. As soon as you take your clothes off, you realise everyone is the same. There's no reason to be shy. It's liberating."
Matt and Sophie enjoying the flora and picturesque grounds. Photo/Jaden McLeod
Proffitt agrees. She made her textile-free debut five years ago in Australia with a group of friends.
"We went skinny dipping in the ocean. When we came back to camp no one put their clothes back on and we finished the road trip naked - even driving naked."
The couple, who have been together three years, like to get naked when they can on beaches or "somewhere where people won't have a problem with it", says Proffitt.
She has encountered some negativity.
"A woman came up to me when I was sunbathing topless and said 'this is a family place and my 11-year-old son is staring at your boobs'."
I thought that was her problem, not mine, but I never want to cause any trouble so I covered up."
Like Nichols, she is disappointed that naturism is marginalised.
"The perception needs to change that it is weird or disgusting. It is not perverted. It's just natural. Everyone is born naked. We are the only creatures who wear clothes, so clothes are weird if you think about it like that.
"It is not that I don't enjoy wearing clothes, I do. I also like being naked. It shouldn't be weird to be your natural self."
Being naked is a great leveller for young people who are always "worried what people think of them", and liberating for women particularly to embrace their bodies more positively.
"If everyone could see everyone all the time they would realise everyone has imperfections, everyone has lumps and bumps ... it is just normal. Don't worry about it."
Amina and Tom Carrigan who own the Katikati Naturist Park. Photo/Supplied
The camp's reception is like any holiday camp with tourist leaflets, maps and icecreams.
There's a scent of lemons and cinnamon.
Swedish owner Amina Carrigan, 37, a former chef, sells her signature saffron buns and Scandinavian rye bread alongside her jewellery designs. She painted the large rocks on the mini golf course as colourful ladybirds.
Beyond the reception, a red and white barrier signals the entry into the camp from which point clothing is "not optional".
"Clothes are non-optional - that is the bottom line. But we are not sadists. We get that everyone needs to cover up occasionally - if you're cold, or sunburnt or when you're barbecuing, near a hot grill, you probably want to put your willy away for safety reasons.
"Other times, walking around, doing the washing, in the lounge area, sauna, spa and pools, playing petanque, just hanging out - people are naked and that's how everyone likes it."
Katikati Naturist Park co-owner Tom Carrigan in front of the petanque area. Photo/John Borren
Carrigan says there is increasing demand in New Zealand for places to "nakation" for people like Nichols and Proffitt, who like to be naked at home and want to find a place where they can on holiday.
Holiday camps can be "a gateway to naturism" for those curious about the lifestyle.
"If you are unsure, haven't done it before, but have an open mind, come in and take your time. We find most people get into it really quickly, enjoy it, and after a while there is nothing to it - they just are."
The Carrigans recently opened a Swedish Cafe on site where day visitors can come and eat lunch with clothes on ... or off.
There are plenty of first time naturists who come to the resort, including some who arrived at the camp not understanding that it was a no clothes venue.
"Some people see the 'naturist' sign but do not know what naturist means, so they turn up thinking it is a site where they can admire New Zealand native plants and birds".
The entrance to Katikati Naturist Park. Photo/Jaden McLeod
The vast grounds are populated with thousands of native trees surrounded by the Kaimai mountain range. In the humidity of summer, those hills are cloaked in a Lord of the Rings mystical steaminess.
Purple flowers, pot plants and tropical flora are flourishing - the groundsman is also a naturist.
To the soundtrack of native birds, guests bush walk along the rocky stream, spot eels or bathe in its cooling pools.
A steeper tramp is rewarded by a sweeping view of the Mount.
So anyone seeking nature in this resort will not be disappointed.
They will also encounter up to 200 peoples camping naked - it has a motel, three chalets, kitchen cabins, tents, campervans and caravans.
The heart of the camp is the sauna, pool and spa area where guests sunbathe, swim, steam, and socialise.
A recreation room with loungers hosts movie nights.
The nudioke (nude karaoke) on New Year's Eve is already sold out.
A world map on the wall by the pool table marks memories of visitors in pins.
Matt Nichols with the world map. Photo/Jaden McLeod
Carrigan estimates 80 per cent of visitors are New Zealanders. Among the Europeans Germans, Dutch, and French dominate, although pins are dotted as far afield as Egypt, Israel and even Iran.
"An Iranian couple, who told us if they did it in their own country they would be beheaded."
Bay of Plenty locals are day visitors, with some regularly coming each weekend even in winter, says Carrigan.
"Some people live openly that they are naturists, some like to fly under the radar and wouldn't want people to know they come here."
A man in the spa said he didn't want to be identified because of his government job.
Twenty people have moved to live permanently on site all year round, including a beauty therapist.
Carrigan says naturist trends have changed from the 70s when naturists tended not to shave or can't wear body jewellery or tattoos.
"The trend now is to have hairless pubic areas or be manicured ... but it is not a rule. It's not like you're inspected at the gate or anything. It's just not like the 70s stereotype of long-haired hippies that people may think, although if that is the way you like it, fine by us too."
Visitors who do turn up not realising the modus operandi often decide to stay. Carrigan estimates eight out of 10 do.
Carrigan tries to welcome everyone but would weed out anyone if they had "wrong intentions".
"We are a family friendly camp. Once a campervan of a family with three kids, 3, 6, 8 from Auckland arrived not knowing, and they were like, 'oh sorry not for us'. Two hours later they were back as they hadn't found any other accommodation, they liked the site and thought they would just try it for a night. They stayed the whole summer and now come back every year."
Ellen Gebel and Bernhard Wiesler chat with Tom Carrigan in Katikati Naturist Park's reception area. Photo/Jaden McLeod
While guests mostly are couples or friends, there are some singles and families too.
Carrigan wants to dispel the perception there is deviancy in naturism.
"If anything children are safer here than they are at other camps because we watch out for any inappropriate behaviour and anyone would be out straight away."
The New Zealand Naturist Federation's stance is that naturism is "absolutely" safe for children, and says on its website,
"Naturists do not deny the sexual nature of human beings, but they reject the all too prevalent view in our society that nudity and sex are synonymous and that children should be "protected" from nudity regardless of context. Nude is not lewd."
Guest Ellen Gebel, 53, says there is no perversion in naturism.
A naturist all her life, she was used to being naked around others as a child growing up in Germany with parents who were naturists.
"There is nothing sexual about a naturist ... I would say it is sensual ... the feel of a breeze on your body, the water in lake or pool ... Free in the air, the sun, everything ... it's healthy.
"After swimming without togs you would think it was crazy to put them on and have them stick to you."
"You never have to worry about what to wear or pack."
When she met partner Bernhard Wiesler six years ago, he had not tried it but watching them chatting by the pool with nothing on but sunscreen and an orange juice you would never know.
Ellen Gebel, 53, and partner Bernhard Wiesler, 52, regularly go on nakations together. Photo/John Borren
"He is coming along nicely," laughs Gebel.
Since meeting, the couple have enjoyed several nakations, and are now en route to Wellington where the New Zealand national naturist festival runs for seven days with hotly contested sports trophies and leisure activities.
Donna Miller, president of the New Zealand Naturist Federation, which is launching a new campaign called Love the Skin You're In. Photo/Supplied
New Zealand is a hot spot for naturists, attracting visitors from overseas as well as homegrown naturism enjoying a boom.
Last year, for the first time in its 70-year history, New Zealand hosted the International Congress of Naturism with guests from 23 countries.
New Zealand is a tourist destination for naturists says Donna Miller, president of the New Zealand Naturist Federation (NZNF).
"More members are travelling overseas to naturist resorts in Europe and making contacts telling them about our country. The [International] Congress certainly put New Zealand on the naturist map in a far greater way."
The NZNF has 1683 members around the country and 252 in the Bay of Plenty region. The national gender ratio is 60/40 male to
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