If you haven't already, you may like to read
Part 1 of this series.
Signs of neglect
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The house at the time of purchase
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When Ron took over the farm it was running 500 ewes and they were starving
from lack of feed as the place was so run down. It had been farmed by an
elderly man who had become unable to cope. Most of the area from the coast
to the main road had been carved into 500 acre blocks which were considered
to be viable one-man units by the Rehabilitation Board. The area had been
part of a big holding not intensively farmed, but run like a station.
On the farm that the Armstrongs had bought no paddock could be ploughed
because of the gorse. There were no fences. Blue gum trees grew
everywhere. The farm buildings were dilapidated. The house was a hundred
years old and had not been painted for thirty years.
Home improvements
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The house after the first renovations
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Before the wedding the kitchen was renovated and an electric stove was put
in to replace the old coal range. Modern cupboards and a new sink and
bench were fitted and the old scullery was incorporated in the kitchen. As
finances permitted, in the living room and one bedroom the dark and
tattered wallpapers were stripped and a decorator skilled at papering scrim
walls put up new wallpaper.
Ron's mother gave them a wedding present of a septic tank and an inside
toilet and this was installed with a handbasin inside the back door so that
the men could wash before coming into the house from the farm.
Roads
Most roads in the areas were shingle roads except the main south road which
was sealed, but the road to their farm was just two wheel tracks with grass
between them. There were shingle pits, but up to that time anyone wanting
shingle on the road had to supply the shingle for the Council to put on the
road boundary. Every day the Armstrongs had to drive more than a mile
from their gate along the dirt road to get the mail.
As the large farms broke up into smaller blocks the roads had to be
developed because there was more traffic and more movement of stock.
Finally the grader came along and levelled and shingled the road.
Dust and wind
The light soil was free-draining, silty and wind-borne, initially loess.
When large areas of land were cleared of gorse and ploughed over huge dust
storms resulted, sometimes reducing visibility so that they couldn't see as
far as the front gate.
The wind would blow in streams, so that at times there would not be a
breath of wind at the house, but a gale a mile or so down the road. On one
occasion in later years the wind blew soil about one chain wide straight
into the cottage on the farm where the Armstrongs' son and daughter-in-law
and their baby lived. The cottage was right in the path of the dust storm
and the house was unfit to live in until it was scoured from front to back
and top to bottom.
Grasses
The natural cover of most of the Canterbury Plains was the native browntop
grass and tussock. Browntop is a low productive grass. It is what Ron
described as 'a semi-twitch' with rhizomes under the ground. When it dries
out it doesn't die. It can be grazed to the roots and will come away
again. The sheep love it, but it doesn't produce bulk. Hence it gives a
low carrying capacity - one sheep to the acre. Ron's aim was for the
ground to be ploughed over and English perennial rye grass and white clover
sown instead so that five or six sheep could be run to the acre. The white
clover takes nitrogen from the air and puts it into the soil for the grass
to feed on.
This would increase production, but it was incredibly hard work. Ron
worked as long as it was light. Bare paddocks would have been easier. It
was worse than starting from scratch because not only did the paddocks have
to be cleared and re-sown, but the farm buildings were dilapidated.
There were also ongoing tasks coping with the porrina - grass grub - and
the rabbits. With such low stocking rates as there had been initially and
the amount of gorse on the property there had been cover for the rabbits to
live undisturbed.
Ron wasn't the only one to work long hours. Judith looked after their two
daughters and two sons, often on her own for long hours while Ron worked on
the farm. She had to cook for the family and the hired farm worker who
lived in the sleepout but had all his meals provided. At first these were
often men who had come from the city to try their hand at farm work. Later
the staff they needed were drawn from Lincoln students doing their
practical work for the Lincoln College Valuation and Farm Management
Diploma. The Armstrong farm provided them with the mixed cropping and
sheep experience.
Money and work
The problems could be summed up as money and work. It was possible to
develop the farm only as money was generated, so it was impossible to
develop at a fast rate at the beginning. Luckily the fifties were good
productive years in terms of the financial return on wool and meat, just as
the war years had been for many farmers.
Part of the development of the pasture included the growth of barley and
oats as a cash crop. Basic equipment for this was a tractor, plough,
grubber, drill and a set of harrows and bought secondhand at clearing sales
they were not too expensive. For the heading they used contract headers
who came in and charged by the acre.
Clearing the land through rotation
Initially the aim was to break up 100 acres each year - the maximum they
could handle financially and physically. That went into rotation. The
first job was ploughing the browntop down and producing great quantities of
short rotation one-year grass which produced greenfeed from the rotting
turf. While it was buried and rotting the sheep fed on the grass and their
droppings added nitrogen to the ground and helped the rotting process. The
next year the rotted material was worked in and provided good soil for a
good cash crop.
Shelter belts
In the forty years that they lived at Dorie Judith and Ron saw tremendous
changes. The face of the land changed. Because of the planting of shelter
belts the velocity of the wind dropped considerably. The old hands used to
say that the wind blew the shingle off the roads. On the other side of the
main road where the land was developed earlier the Winchmore irrigation
scheme resulted in the planting of shelter belts before the Second World
War. Each shelter belt helped to break the wind on the plains. Later the
Armstrongs planted their own shelter belts, first to shelter the house.
They required time, money and care. They were very important. Not only
did they give shelter, but they aided soil conservation by preventing
wind-blown paddocks. They assisted with moisture conservation because the
more sheltered the pastures the less moisture was lost. They helped lambs
to survive in storms, and provided shelter for the stock, especially after
shearing to avoid sunburn.
Pasture management
After each crop the paddock was sown in permanent pasture which should last
five years. Pasture management was an important part of farming. The
better the pasture was managed and the more water was put on it, the longer
it would last. The aim was to improve the pasture by rotation. The first
lot of grass that was put down reverted back to browntop. Lime was a big
factor in improving the pasture. The soil was very low in Ph - it tested
below 5. Samples from moist ground were tested by the Department of
Agriculture. The Ph needed to be between 6 and 6.5 for clover to thrive
and hence grass. Lime was a very important part of the production of good
pasture because browntop and lime are incompatible. If the Ph test was
6.3 or more it would create an environment where the clover and grass would
survive and smother the browntop. The increased fertility was better for
stocking.
After ten to fifteen years when the pasture had been through the cycle
three or four times most of the land had been improved.
Coping with dry summers
As the Dorie soil was friable, easy to work and free draining, a light soil
with little clay, it had very little water retention. Anything would grow
when there was water, but the summers were very dry all along the coast.
Twenty five inches of rain was regarded as a good year, but one year Dorie
had only thirteen inches of rain.
In the writing of the early settlers the area along the coast was described
as the Plains Desert. Settlers walking through the area planted cabbage
trees to mark the track. The road from Dorie to Ashburton has the original
cabbage trees still growing along the road.
Read Part 3
to find how irrigation proved to be an effective but
costly solution.