photos-for-jean-GATHER-tararua-Carley-13

I’d lived in town my whole life, so I didn’t have any experience growing up on a farm. I hated high school. When I said I wanted to leave my parents told me I had to get Level 2 and a full-time job. So that’s what I did: I got a job rousing, which I’d done before on school holidays, and left.

I was sixteen, but I really believed I didn’t have to do what everyone else was doing. My friends thought you had to go to uni straight after school, even if you didn’t know what you wanted to do. That didn’t sound fun to me. But while I was rousing I thought, “Oh, it would be fun being the person outside the shed dealing with the stock.”

I don’t make big plans, and it was my mum who saw an ad for the Growing Future Farmers programme. I didn’t even know that shepherding was a thing, but I thought, “May as well.” I got accepted and was placed at Patitapu Station in Alfredton. I said to Mum and Dad, “See you in two years,” and off I went. I was taught how to shear, drive tractors, tag cattle, train and work dogs, and stockmanship. When you find the right people to train you, it all just falls into place. I enjoy being in the yards sorting up the stock into neat lines, mustering cattle, sheep-working my dogs and the serenity of being the only one out on the hills in the sunshine.

I graduated at the end of 2021 and was lucky to get a full-time job on the station. Even though it’s just for the next year or so, it gives me time to get my dog team built up and put everything I have learnt into practice. Asking questions and just learning as much as I can is important. I now have a “big-girl job,” so yeah, that’s pretty awesome. It’s way better than being in the classroom.

GATHER is Shepherdess's storytelling and portraiture project documenting life in provincial Aotearoa New Zealand. In our latest series, we present the words of ten women who call the Tararua District home. Over the past few months, writer Carly Thomas worked with each woman to help them bring their writing to life, and photographer Abbe Hoare visited their homes to capture their portraits. GATHER was supported by the Tararua District Creative Communities Committee, through funding from Creative New Zealand. If you'd like GATHER to come to your area, get in touch with us at [email protected]. We'd love to hear from you!

 

This story appeared in the Ngahuru Autumn 2022 Edition of Shepherdess.

Related Stories

Māori woman standing inside a marae

Wisdom from the Skies

Heeni Hoterene transforms maramataka lunar calendar wisdom for modern contexts, so it resonates with an ever-evolving world.

Read More
Giraffe House_Lynne Atkins - Manawatu Gardens Festival

Green Fingers at Greenhaugh

Ahead of this year’s Manawatū Garden Festival, we catch up with Lynne Atkins. She has spent close to fifty years creating Greenhaugh Gardens. Her story is rooted in hard work,

Read More

Prue & Kate

For Kate and Prue, being in business with a sibling means they are able to support each other through thick and thin.

Read More

Spring Cleaning

Letter from the Editor, Kōanga Spring 2025 Edition.

Read More

Out Now

Twenty-Sixth Edition

Our Takurua Winter Edition is out 8 June.

Do you have a story to tell?

We'd love to hear it.