In 1958, when Lester Masters gave a radio talk on 2YZ (a transcript of which is held in the museum’s archive collection), the hut was practically a ruin, having stood for over 85 years. It had undergone very little in the way for repairs, although a new door (which is the one pictured) had been installed in 1906. Throughout its lifetime, names and accompanying dates were carved all over the weatherbeaten door, doorposts, and interior woodwork.
One of the names Lester remembered, deeply etched on the side rail of his favourite bunk, was J H (Jack) Harris, with the date 1886 alongside. Jack was the hunter shepherd of the area who had been employed by the then-Kereru Station owner, Arthur Harding. A particular tale Lester recalled was that on one occasion, when Jack arrived at the station after having spent several weeks in the Ruahines, he handed over a parcel of more than 90 pig snouts. He was paid £5 and promptly left for Napier to purchase a brand new tailor-made suit.
For any person, after a hard day roaming the formidable ranges, the Ruahine Hut was a welcome sight. Pushing open the door, the hut provided the weary traveller with a sense of home, a respite from the weather, and a place to relax and sleep in the embrace and warmth of an open fire, over which the billy constantly boiled and the camp oven sent out mouth-watering aromas of a succulent venison stew or baking bread.
Lester eloquently recalled: “I doubt if any more pleasing sight could be found along the whole length of the range at Christmas time than the old whare, when that most beautiful of our native flowers, the scarlet mistletoe, is hanging in festoons from the sombre beeches that encircle the glade.”
The heavy, cumbersome door was laboriously carried by Jim Milligan off the Ruahine Range to the Big Hill valley - a remarkable feat on foot - then driven by tractor over Big Hill (approximately 670 metres) where it was finally loaded onto a truck and taken to Lester Masters’ home at Twyford, before being given to the museum.
Even now, protected in its purpose-built crate in MTG’s collection store and wrapped snugly in a calico sheet, the door seems caught in the timeless spell of the magnificent smoky-blue Ruahine Ranges, subsumed by happy memories of the large number of musterers, hunters, trampers and other wanderers of the ranges, to whom it once afforded shelter. For many – it is an old friend indeed.
On behalf of all of us at MTG Hawke’s Bay, we wish you and yours a wonderful fun-filled holiday season and a happy and prosperous New Year. For those lucky enough to be tramping in Aoteoroa’s magnificent back country, enjoy the welcoming sight at the end of a hard day’s exploring of a hut nestled amongst the bush, beckoning you in.