Horticulturalist Bob Teal training autumn blackberry vine growth ready for next spring. Photo / Catherine Fry
Horticulturalist Bob Teal training autumn blackberry vine growth ready for next spring. Photo / Catherine Fry
A Cambridge orchard is proving that you don’t have to be a large-scale operation to be successful.
At Bruntwood Gardens, Robert Teal has built a thriving business on a relatively small piece of land, demonstrating a talent for high-quality production and a resourceful approach to horticulture.
Teal, known asBob, was a finalist in the 2025 Ballance Farm Environment Awards – Waikato Region.
On the Waikato awards night, he walked away with two awards: the Rabobank Agri-Business Management Award and the New Zealand Farm Environment Trust Innovation Award.
Teal’s relationship with his piece of land started in 1980 when he was a dairy farmer and bought the 32ha block with the intention to convert it to a horticultural enterprise.
“After a long dairy farming career, I was ready to stop getting up early and being out in all weather conditions,” he said.
Teal said nothing happened overnight in horticulture, and 10-year plans were essential, as most new plantings took four to five years to produce a profitable crop.
“The advantage of having acreage gave me the opportunity to continue with other streams of income while waiting for planting to establish.”
These included bringing his in-calf young stock and growing the calves on to sell, which provided cash for the first year.
“During those first years, I tried several other crops, including maize and sunflowers, and growing on protea and blueberry root cuttings to sell,” he said.
“I had 20 acres in asparagus, and one planting lasted 20 years in the ground!”
Meanwhile, the berry plantings that would become his main business for 30 years were being established.
Teal has subdivided a few times, and there are now five houses on the land.
“That’s five families using the town, the schools, the services and providing workers for the district, and I think that’s a good thing.”
Bob Teal repurposed 10 pushchairs into harvesting trolleys. Photo / Catherine Fry
He seeks to use the safest products and is always looking at new products as they are released.
He has adapted a golf cart to pull an automated sprayer unit and is delighted with the result.
“It’s the perfect width for the tunnels, and I can make it go slow enough to ensure a nice, even coverage.”
Teal spent time on TradeMe buying 10 old pushchairs and converted each one into a trolley for collecting harvested berries.
Depending on the worker, each trolley can accommodate four to six trays before being taken to be processed.
Teal’s awards reflect his expertise at making a one-hectare berry garden a viable and profitable venture, and also his “can-do” attitude, where he invents his own solutions to problems that arise in his berry business.
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Video / NZ Herald