Labour weekend and it is two years since we bought the farm! And we have done a lot since then, I know as I can feel quite a bit of it in my bones! George and Marianne were with us for the weekend, and bought our dinner with them on the first night. They had dived for these. How amazing it is living in New Zealand. We began with squid, light fried in butter with chilli, corriander, spring onion and fish sauce (from Cuisine), then the beautiful crayfish were served with boiled potatoes, mint and butter and rocket with avocado and our oil of course, simply divine. Next day we headed into Greytown for breakfast, and Marianne and I bought the table for the bathroom in the shearers quarters, it was good to have a look around. Greytown is fantastic for shoppers! Next day dawned sunny after two cold wet and windy days.
Friday, October 31, 2008
The earth moved
Labour weekend and it is two years since we bought the farm! And we have done a lot since then, I know as I can feel quite a bit of it in my bones! George and Marianne were with us for the weekend, and bought our dinner with them on the first night. They had dived for these. How amazing it is living in New Zealand. We began with squid, light fried in butter with chilli, corriander, spring onion and fish sauce (from Cuisine), then the beautiful crayfish were served with boiled potatoes, mint and butter and rocket with avocado and our oil of course, simply divine. Next day we headed into Greytown for breakfast, and Marianne and I bought the table for the bathroom in the shearers quarters, it was good to have a look around. Greytown is fantastic for shoppers! Next day dawned sunny after two cold wet and windy days.
Monday, October 6, 2008

Weekend country retreat:
Attractive one bedroom cottage in Masterton, the heart of the Wairarapa.
A delightful cottage to quietly relax and recharge your batteries; a tranquil retreat to read, and to discover the attractive environs of Masterton, Carterton, Greytown and Martinborough. Simply stunning!!
$165 including gst per night, breakfast included. Sleeps 1-2 people, two nights minimum. To book email dianaj@orgdev.co.nz
Furnished french style with beautiful linen, claw-foot bath, warmed floors, open gas fire, french doors opening to a courtyard and garden planted in box trees, lavenders, red poppies and rosemary.
You can walk to the Ruamahunga river at the back of the property, and discover in nearby Masterton, cafes, Aratoi art gallery, Moore Wilson’s fresh market, Saturday farmers market, Sunday street market, Henley Lake and Queen Elizabeth park. Greytown, Gladstone and Martinborough are the nearby towns.
The restoration
Built in 1924, this cottage has been lovingly restored and now includes a luxurious bathroom and easy to use kitchen. The rimu walls have been rubbed with linseed oil and the wooden floors polished. The living room and bedroom remain original.
The lean-to was demolished and rebuilt on the existing footprint and includes a new bathroom and well-equipped kitchen.
History of the building
The original shearers’ quarters consisted of a kitchen, laundry, dining room, bathroom, and four bedrooms off the porch. In its recent history, the building was cut in half and one half taken to a neighbouring property where it is also used for
accommodation. In the summer evenings, shearers lay in their bunks and wrote their names on the walls. Some worked out their wages, others left messages. In the 1950’s the walls were used to write telephone numbers of local contractors. Many of these notes remain on the walls.
Over the years, family and friends slept in this building. Abandoned in early 2000’s the building became a haven for birds. The current owners bought the property in 2006 and restored the building as inviting accommodation. Bordering a working olive grove and vines, there is a private courtyard and, views of the Tararua ranges, an ideal haven from which to explore the Wairarapa.
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Putting in the frost protection system
The race is on. Will we get the frost system in before the spring frost hit? We have a new approach. The fan system, while great in our expriments, was drawing down frozen air, even from 10m up, the neighbours complained, and asked did we have resource consent. They hated the orange tube soaring skyward to draw the air down. So down it came.
Now we have kms of 19mm pipe. We clip this to the lower wire of the vines, at 1m intervals, hard on our fingers. The trickiest part is unravelling the pipes, it is so easy to bend and fold in half and then the pipe is stuffed. We have dug a trench for the 30mm pipe and the 19mm pipes go for 3/4 of the row and then we join 13mm pipes off that. This weekend, Jeanette came over from Raumati and lay out all the flipper pipes at each post, then helped me clip the 19mm pipes to the wire. Backbreaking stuff, bending down every paced step to clip the pipe to the wire, standing, taking a step and then puting the clips on the wire. Close to the ground work, and remembering to bend at the knees is a challenge. We completed five rows, three more than we thought we would.
Now we have kms of 19mm pipe. We clip this to the lower wire of the vines, at 1m intervals, hard on our fingers. The trickiest part is unravelling the pipes, it is so easy to bend and fold in half and then the pipe is stuffed. We have dug a trench for the 30mm pipe and the 19mm pipes go for 3/4 of the row and then we join 13mm pipes off that. This weekend, Jeanette came over from Raumati and lay out all the flipper pipes at each post, then helped me clip the 19mm pipes to the wire. Backbreaking stuff, bending down every paced step to clip the pipe to the wire, standing, taking a step and then puting the clips on the wire. Close to the ground work, and remembering to bend at the knees is a challenge. We completed five rows, three more than we thought we would.
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Billie and Tamai pictures from their July visit
Frost and winter pruning
Spring is here, the winter slowly drifting off, remnants of rain lagging behind. The flooded Ruamahunga has returned to normal for now, the Tararua hills are covered with snow, David is working flat out for three weekends now putting in our frost system before the grape have their bud burst. In the past two years we have lost our grapes to frost. A 5 degree frost kills anything alive and tender as grapes and leaves. As part of our research he set up two thermomentres, one at ground level and the other 5 metres high. I was the one who ventured out at 2am to check temperatures,
3
We have been on trade me to buy a sprayer for the olives trees so we can spray nutrients into the leaves and get rid of the peakcock spot, which is threatening the trees. So much to do. We will be spraying a mix of copper and sulphur over several weeks. However before we do that, we need to now find a tractor! We will also be spraying sulphur onto the vine leaves to prevent mildew.
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Win some, lose some and finding black gold.
We are in the home strait with the renovations. Friday the Shearers quarters had their borer spray over all the old wood, powder in the roof area and liquid on all wooden surfaces. So the borer will die as they come in contact with the external surface of the wood. they have a three year life cycle, (amazing what you learn, Neill from Zap was most educative), so all will be gone in three years, so the borer are facing a slow and dwindling process. The concrete floors haven't turned out as we had hoped so two extra costs of sealer (now 9) still didnt improve so a new high gloss surface has been put on, however its not great, just better than what it was. No-one knows what hasnt worked here so no real solution. Awkward. Today
Robin and Matt are here to put in the bathroom.
Many discoveries. The guy who sold me the basin didnt sell me the complete piping for the push button plug so had to buy a new one. Spazio Casa didnt include the base of the tap so it couldnt be installed. The holes for the loo seat were too small for the screws supplied, fortunately Robin had a drill to widen the hole, the water mixer had a backing on it that the tiler hadnt allowed for, and the concrete floor was uneven and Matt has spent most of the morning filing a rubber pad to ensure the bath will sit flat. Mixed with this is the rain means even poorer cell phone coverage than unusual and the guy polishing the wooden floor due today didnt turn up. Grrrrr. Renovations! However it is going to be fantastic when all done.
The bathroom is transformed already.
From this:




The bathroom is transformed already.
From this:

Can't show you the final thing yet. David sanded and primed the external doors and I oiled the back of them. They have come up beautifully and so now ready for another 77 years of life. With the oil, they become a dark orangey brown, rich and gorgeous. WE think they are heart rimu.
By Sunday I have completed oiling the walls of the bedroom and have begun on the lounge. Walking back and forth from the cottage to the shearers quarters we have spied ripe olives!! There are loads more than we thought we had, lush, huge rippening olives, black gold, so out with the ladder and up the trees, picking an olive here, 2 or 3 from there. We now have two large jars of olives underway with changing the water daily for 14 days before putting into brine. I had my pockets bulging with these olives as I was picking them and vert glad to get them before the birds. Mostly manzanilla. It is quite a mystery, and they only have become visible since ripening, and as we look now we can see 10 - 12 trees with great looking olives which is 10 more trees than we had first thought. So I have been envisioning thousands of olives on the trees for next year.
By Sunday I have completed oiling the walls of the bedroom and have begun on the lounge. Walking back and forth from the cottage to the shearers quarters we have spied ripe olives!! There are loads more than we thought we had, lush, huge rippening olives, black gold, so out with the ladder and up the trees, picking an olive here, 2 or 3 from there. We now have two large jars of olives underway with changing the water daily for 14 days before putting into brine. I had my pockets bulging with these olives as I was picking them and vert glad to get them before the birds. Mostly manzanilla. It is quite a mystery, and they only have become visible since ripening, and as we look now we can see 10 - 12 trees with great looking olives which is 10 more trees than we had first thought. So I have been envisioning thousands of olives on the trees for next year.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
A little bit of this, a little bit of that
The grapes might have a virus! Several have dark red leaves which are not autumn colours, and the bark has peeled from the stem with a nasty looking growth in between. Essentially the roots arent talking with the leaves and the leaves are giving up in disgust. Andrew, our olives advisor, came in on sunday and amongst many other gems, thinks that the growth is solidified sap from severe frosts several years ago. Believe it or not, this is great news and our thoughts of having to pull all the vines up and burn them have moved further back in our minds.
Richard had the rest of sunday, tucking in the long arms of the very much alive vines. this was after he had mowed both the vines and the north olives. You may be thinking what were we doing with all this activity. David distressed
painted the ceiling of the shearers quarters. He faced some opposition from both me and Jane, however it does make the room a lot lighter. I love the rimu boards, however four sides and the floors may well be enough wood. I am slowly oiling the boards and they are coming up beautifully.
Plans are now afoot to put inthe gas fire and the kauri surround. My brother Doug carefully packed this and ensured it made its way from Christchurch to Masterton and it is in beautiful condition. Meanwhile, my contribution to the weekend? I was on compost again, and managed 30 trees. the rich mushroom compost will activate
bacteria under the soil and give the tree more life. Andrew was a great source of encouragement and assistance. We will be planting 200 more trees this November, after most of the frosts, and in the next couple of months, ensure all the small young trees we already have, are given a little sleeping bag at their base to keep them frost free during winter. There is work to do.
It has been pouring with rain, much needed. Our grass has gone from white to green in two weeks. and the roses have a new lease of life.
Plans are now afoot to put inthe gas fire and the kauri surround. My brother Doug carefully packed this and ensured it made its way from Christchurch to Masterton and it is in beautiful condition. Meanwhile, my contribution to the weekend? I was on compost again, and managed 30 trees. the rich mushroom compost will activate
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