thisNZlife

ALL IN THE FAMILY

They were very much flabbered and even more gasted, not least by the myriad, magical lights of glow worms. Tane Tinorau realized that this was something they shouldn’t keep to themselves. He started Waitomo’s first tourism business, and several of his descendants still work there today.

Up the road on the Stubbs’ farm, Hugh’s descendants — Alister, Antony, Ben, Angus and Biddy and their respective spouses — also believe the area’s grandeur should be shared and have taken great strides in achieving this. Of course, they have had a head start from all that careering through the landscape as children. They know the nooks; they know the crannies.

They were always finding and exploring new caves. They found moa bones taller than themselves; the skeletons of 40 kākāpō, a now-critically endangered parrot. They camped among the stalagmites and under the stalactites and squeezed through narrow fissures. They shuddered when faced with longlegged cave wētā and batted away other insects. They dangled precariously on the ends of ropes to see if a newly discovered tomo (hole) really was access to a new cave. They did archaeological digs by candlelight, bringing home bones for Ann to reassemble, a jigsaw to beat all jigsaws. While their friends lived vicariously via Famous Five and Swallows and Amazons books, the Stubbs children were the Five and the Blackett and Walker children.

Now that they are adults, they want their children — Fern, Hazel, Elijah, Edan, Zarah, Max, Pippin and their cousins, the fifth generation of Waitomo Stubbs — to be the Harry, Hermione, Ron, Sam and Frodo of their age.

After a lifetime on the farm, they are still excited and enthusiastic about their surroundings. Their conversation tumbles around the room. “If you took all the vegetation off, you would see the terrain is like the tray you buy eggs in…,” starts Biddy’s husband, Rich Kersel. “What about when….?” interrupts Biddy. “Oh, yes. When Dad…” interjects Angus. “Went missing!” finishes Ben and rolls his eyes. Alister looks abashed; Ann seems exasperated.

Perhaps she still hasn’t forgiven him for the day he went off to work on a track without telling anyone, failed to turn up to the dinner table and was eventually found indignant and broken after much frantic searching. It is undecided whether his leg or his ego took the more significant beating.

His ill-fated track is just one of several crisscrossing the farm, and there is always room for more. Most of us spent the pandemic lockdowns tucked up in front of the telly bingewatching and binge-eating. Biddy, Rich — an outdoor education and P.E. instructor — Hazel (14) and Fern (12) bushwacked their way through the undergrowth, creating a track for a 75-minute walk (called the Misty Mountain). They also developed the Rocks Track for a half-hour amble.

“It was fun,” laughs Biddy. “And it gave us something to do instead of being confined to the house. We were lucky; we had just over 674 hectares to be ‘locked down’ on.” Fern sitting on the carpet, her feet propped up on her skateboard, looks dubious about the adjective “fun” for all that hard work, but is sensible enough not to say anything.

Biddy, Angus and Ben have all returned to the family farm to settle in houses spread across the property. Ben runs the farm; Biddy and her husband Rich have Rock Retreat; and Angus and his wife Rach operate Te Tiro B&B and work for Waitomo’s famous Black Water Rafting Co.

Much of their downtime is consumed by their artistic endeavours — a family trait handed down by Ann, who recently held her first solo exhibition. It was a bit of a set-up. Her family had told her for years that she should be exhibiting, but Ann always dismissed the idea. “Recently, the children decided we should hold a joint exhibition, which I agreed to, only to find that all along they had planned that it would only be my work on display. I had to go along with it; it was too late to back out. I was flattered to sell some of my works.”

Ann’s parents were full-time artists and passed that talent onto her — her choice is watercolour. Biddy studied textile design and silversmithing at the Otago School of Art, works across all mediums, and is particularly interested in portraiture. Ben studied ceramic sculpture at the same school and is a poet and musician, while his wife, Bex, is an art teacher. She is presently experimenting with a pastel, gold leaf and hand-stitching combination. Angus’ hobby is photography.

The Stubbs family art is available for sale. There are three studios minutes apart on the farm, all of which can be visited on request.

The Rocks Track goes through an integral part of the Stubbs’ farm. In 1982, more than a third of the property was put into a Queen Elizabeth Trust Covenant to preserve its native flora and fauna. The independent body partners with landowners to preserve and protect private land, and the Stubbs Family Covenant is now regularly visited by scientists, botanists, geologists and other assorted -ists as a rare pristine research laboratory.

It is not only -ists who benefit. The farm hosts programmes for school children that combine abseiling, caving and teambuilding. It is also part of the route of the Waitomo Trail Run and a playground and base for cavers, climbers and boulderers.

The family also holds Stubbs Days organized by the Museum of Caves (waitomocaves.com), where apart from the physical activities, visitors also collect native seeds. These are passed on to Jan Simmons, a propagator dedicated to the ecological restoration of native forests and wetlands. The seeds collected for Jan to sprout are eventually planted back on the farm during Stubbs Days, infilling the bush.

Leaving the area to the whims of nature untouched by man’s folly has also allowed Alister and Ben to study and monitor another thing they are passionate about — clean water. “This farm,” explains Ben, “is unusual in that the headwaters of four tributaries rise here — the Mangapōhue, Marokopa, Moakurarua and Waitomo streams. We have fenced nearly every stream, and it is extraordinary how clean the water has become.”

It’s hard to differentiate work from leisure on the Stubbs’ farm; there is arrant enjoyment in all they do. But one activity where the fun is far more than the work needed to organize it are the musical concerts Biddy and Rich hold in their backyard, which is landscaped around existing limestone monoliths. Performers have included noted musicians Paul Ubana Jones, Ciaran McMeeken and Graeme James. An added sweetener for visiting artists is that they get to stay at Rock Retreat, the little B&B down the drive. It is an off-grid traditional mountain hut made from recycled materials and built by Biddy and Rich, the income from which allows Biddy to spend more time on her other great love — art.

From the top of Misty Mountain, the Stubbs can see as far as Mount Ruapehu, almost as far as the sea rolling onto the west coast, inland for too many kilometres to count and north across the rolling King Country to Mount Te Aroha and the Firth of Thames. It’s all out there, but for four generations of this family, for all the travel, the adventures, and the other lives they have lived outside of the family farm, all they want or need is right here.

True Colours

en-nz

2022-09-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-09-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://thisnzlife.pressreader.com/article/282157885063034

NZ Lifestyle Magazine Group