The story of two Mid-Canterbury farmers working together to build a
productive farm from a neglected property at Dorie
An interview with Ron and Judith Armstrong
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Judith and Ron Armstrong
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Part 1
The years before Dorie
Ron and Judith Armstrong gave their best energies and dedication for most
of their working lives to their farm in Dorie. Judith came from a farming
family; Ron's passion for farming came from regular visits to friends on a
farm in his childhood.
Judith's farming family
Judith Mclaughlin had farming in her blood with grandparents on both sides
farming in New Zealand. Her McLaughlin grandfather worked at Longbeach and
at the Camerons' estate at Springfield in the days when there were over a
hundred teams of horses on the farm. Later he developed his own farm at
Irwell because he worked for the McMillans and was sold land by them.
Often at that time farmers who sold some of their land lent money on
mortgage to the purchaser. This happened less after the Depression when
many second mortgages lent to assist farmers in difficulty were wiped by
the Government in the Mortgage Relief Act, as lenders felt it was a less
secure form of investment.
The Irwell farm of 225 acres was always a borderline unit as it was created
out of another farm. This land was taken over by Judith's father and
farmed in addition to land of his own. He and his wife built a little
house of their own and expanded it as the family arrived. Judith's
grandmother lived on her own when she was widowed and continued to milk a
cow every day until shortly before she died at the age of seventy seven.
Ron's initation into farming
Ron's family had a large drapery business, T. Armstrong and Co, and a lot
of country clients. His father had given into his father's persuasions and
had given up an ambition to go farming so that he could take over the
business.
Ron was taken at the age of six to go duck shooting in North Canterbury at
a friend's farm. He was left there for a holiday and went there every
holiday thereafter, and continued in his ambition to be a farmer.
When he left school he worked on a farm, but his father wanted him to train
as an accountant and then join the business. He agreed to work for an
accountant for a year provided he could choose to go farming at the end of
the year if he still wanted to. After a year Ron's view was unchanged. He
did not want to work indoors all his life. He went farming in a number of
Canterbury areas for five years to get varied experience on sheep, cattle
and mixed cropping farms. He spent a year studying at Lincoln Agricultural
College, Canterbury.
A range of experiences working as a farm hand
He had a mixture of experiences. He was on one large North Canterbury
sheep station in a swampy area at the confluence of the Pahau and Hurunui
Rivers. There were fourteen employees - a wide range of personalities.
The cook, an old Scotsman who had deserted from a ship some years before,
drank whisky in great quantities. The weekend food was terrible but once
the weekend bottle of whisky was finished the meals were good until he
started the next bottle.
Bathing was a new experience. Instead of the daily bath to which he had
been accustomed in the city Ron found that with the shortage of hot water
they were allocated a bath once a week. The men reckoned that the cook had
washed the dishes in the bath water before they got it. Luckily they
bathed in near darkness as there was no electricity at that time, so they
couldn't see the water clearly. The rest of the time they had to wash with
cold water out of the spring - and this was during a severe winter. They
used to have to break ice an inch thick on the troughs for the cattle to
drink. Because of the swampy ground there was always a fog until
midday.
Lighting for the men's quarters was from candles or oil lamps, but the main
house had acetylene lighting. There were brackets on the wall with an
acetylene gas supply. The gas came from an outside building where they put
water on the acetylene powder, which they imported from America, producing
a gas which was trapped and piped into the house, giving a very bright
light.
Ron at this time was always the employee. At the large sheep station he
was one of the group of fourteen, but at other times he was the only
employee and had a greater range of things to do. He lived in a sleepout,
often primitive. One was actually in the toolhouse, and another was
attached to the toolhouse and birds flew in and out. One night he woke up
scratching himself and later found that birds had nested above his bed and
the bird lice were falling through the match lining on to his head and his
pillow.
Not an easy life, but not a deterrent
If Ron's family thought that the tough life might put Ron off his farming
ambitions, they were wrong.
Purchase of the farm
He was looking for a farm when post-war rehabilitation was at its peak and
would-be farmers had to go in a ballot for farms. There was also operating
at that time a Land Sales Court which governed the price of farms. Any
farm that came on to the market had to go before the Land Sales Court set
up in 1943-44 and be valued. This had the effect of suppressing the land
price. The returned servicemen were put on the land and given low interest
loans by the Government. The low prices meant less cost to the Government.
Ron's father could see that sooner or later the Land Sales Court would
be abolished and with the free market the prices would soar. He advised
Ron to start looking for a farm and put him in touch with a suitable land
agent. He settled on buying a farm of 774 acres at Dorie and lived there
for thirty eight years.
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Ron and Judith on their wedding day
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Judith and Ron meet.
Meanwhile Judith had trained as a schoolteacher and accepted an appointment
to teach in a country school near her home at Irwell. Ron was working on a
farm at Irwell. While there she and Ron met and they married and settled
into farming at Dorie a year after he bought the farm in 1952.
Marrying and settling on their own farm sounds like the American Dream, but
the life they embarked on was far from easy.
Read Part 2 to find out what awaited them on
the farm.