Weekend Herald

At one with land and bush

There’s an outdoor bath and a cold beer in a waterfall, says Robyn Welsh

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Richard Bird’s happy place is deep in the native bush surroundin­g his home and its “Birdsnest” guest accommodat­ion. For this Englishman, who grew up next to a farm and who worked on farms when he first came to New Zealand on his OE, his decade here has been one of a supreme connection with the land.

Beyond the walls of this renovated home and guest quarters with its original foundation­s dating back more than 100 years, Richard and his ex-wife Angela installed two more guest wings in the bush.

There’s the 5m-wide glamping tent “nest” with its separate outdoor kitchen and bathroom and the “nest tin box” created out of a former shipping container, which both incorporat­e totara timber from the property.

Richard’s most special connection with this land is his escape up into the bush to an outdoor bath with its heated, treated water from the nearby stream. “It’s very therapeuti­c to relax in and contemplat­e life,” he says. Occasional­ly there is a beer to be had at the waterfall 200m into the bush directly behind the house.

The father of a family who lived here during the late 1940s managed without a fridge by hiding his beer in the waterfall. Richard learned of his story, and his wife’s on-site shop here, when some of their descendant­s came to stay. On their first visit, Richard gave them a page from the 1920s newspaper that he had pulled out from behind original sarking during kitchen renovation­s. On another visit, they all made the bush walk up to the waterfall for old time’s sake. “When I pulled out a beer for each of them, they all just burst into tears,” he says.

For Richard, it has added to the magic of a property he and Angela discovered by chance in 2007. During a weekend break in Northland, Angela picked up her usual pile of real estate brochures, but it wasn’t until they were back home in Te Kauwhata that Richard, who was a contract share milker, spotted the item on this property.

He turned to Angela, who was a rostered midwife, and said, “When can you get another day off ? We’re going back.” He says, “I don’t know what it was about the property but it just drew me

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990 TROUNSON PARK ROAD, DONNELLYS CROSSING, KAIPARA SIZE (more or less): Land 13.88ha; house

240sq m.

PRICE GUIDE: RV $385,000.

AUCTION: March 29.

INSPECT: Phone agent for an appointmen­t to view.

SCHOOLS: Dargaville Primary School, Dargaville Intermedia­te, Dargaville High School.

CONTACT: Catherine Stewart and Lisa Pocklingto­n. Catherine

027 356 5031 or Lisa

021 121 8419.

ON THE WEB: bayleys.co.nz/1020168 in. She loved it too.” Within days, they were sitting on the back deck here taking in the developmen­t potential of both the house, its 8ha of bush and 6ha of bare land, used for grazing.

The original house was extended by the previous owner and architect, the late Barry Rusden, who created the symmetrica­l frontage and added the decorative turret that came from a Mormon church. From conversati­ons with Barry, Richard also learned that the original house was built in the 1900s and extended during the 1980s. The long narrow footprint of this home was ideal for creating two-bedroom guest accommodat­ion alongside the threebedro­om family quarters at the original end of the house, for them and their two children, now adults.

Richard and Angela’s interior renovation­s included recycled kauri flooring to match the original kauri under the old kitchen linoleum. There is also style-appropriat­e wallpaper throughout.

Richard fitted in renovation­s around his fulltime job managing a local dairy farm. He has not been able to realise his dream of building a path up to the waterfall and its glow worms. That is for the next owner as Richard moves on to new opportunit­ies.

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