Cuisine

DESIGN FILES

/ MR & MRS WARD / ROB PINKNEY KOWHAI FORGE

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There’s nothing Julian Ward and his brother Tristan like more than to receive a call from a landowner to say a large tree has come down in a storm. That’s when the adventure begins. They head out in the ute to retrieve fallen branches and spend the next few hours companiona­bly chopping them into useable logs. “The people you meet are really nice; there’s such camaraderi­e. One couple in Helensvill­e sent us home with some amazing scones. Tristan and I have lots of laughs, plus it’s great exercise and stress relief as we split it all by hand,” says Julian.

As well as playing around in the woods, Julian is one half of Mr & Mrs Ward, a bespoke furniture and cabinetry business that he runs with his wife, interior architect and designer, Janice Kumar-ward. During the course of 10 years of running their business, friends have become collaborat­ors and business colleagues have become friends. To highlight this homegrown talent and to celebrate a decade in a challengin­g industry, Mr & Mrs Ward decided to release 10 new homeware products – a showcase of what such partnershi­ps can achieve. From bedlinen to breadboard­s, and art to a fire pit, the designs are all based on their favourite things, items the Ward family use and love in their everyday lives.

Julian knows that whether it’s wood for the fireplace in winter or kindling for the barbecue, a good axe is an asset. So, when Mr and Mrs Ward heard about blacksmith Rob Pinkney at Kowhai Forge and his commitment to keeping the dying art of traditiona­l hand-forged axe-making alive, they knew they had their man.

Based in Te Awamutu, Rob created a kindling axe with a short handle for the 10 favourite things project. “A kindling axe has to have reasonable heft so there’s enough momentum, but be light enough to use with one hand,” says Rob.

The body of the axe is formed out of a flat bar of mild steel that is folded and welded in a coal fire. During this process, a high-carbon steel blade is inserted which is what gives the cutting edge – called ‘the bit’ – its sharpness.

The handle is made from locally milled robinia – a strong, durable wood – which Rob sources from a small family business in Otorohanga. He takes the raw material to a Men’s Shed in Tauranga where a bunch of woodworkin­g enthusiast­s craft it into shape. “Then I fit the handle to the eye nice and tight so it works well,” says Rob.

And, to get you started, Mr and Mrs Ward sell the axe with a bag of wood, so you can chop away all of those frustratio­ns. Mrandmrswa­rd.nz / kowhaiforg­e.co.nz

Bee Gap tells us that bees pollinate ⅓ of our food supply and ⅓ of the feed for our meat sources nationwide. Give them a helping hand by raising leafcutter and solitary bees at home. Begin with a Bee Gap bee house and you’ll get a starting population of leafcutter bee cocoons in the springsumm­er. Throughout the summer the bees hatch, then go forth and pollinate (though note that they don’t produce honey). There’s also an option for Bee Gap to overwinter your bees, and then provide you with at least 50 healthy leafcutter bees preincubat­ed in spring ready for the upcoming season. Leafcutter and solitary bees are said to be harmless and gentle-natured and safe around children and pets. Beegap.co.nz

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