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Home / The Country

Joyce and Jock Wyllie: Life on Golden Bay’s scenic Kaihoka Station

By Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
RNZ·
3 Feb, 2025 02:19 AM4 mins to read

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Jock and Joyce Wyllie in the yard at Kaihoka Station. Photo / RNZ, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Jock and Joyce Wyllie in the yard at Kaihoka Station. Photo / RNZ, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

By Cosmo Kentish-Barnes of RNZ

Joyce and Jock Wyllie first met when she was a locum vet visiting his isolated farm in Golden Bay.

The busy couple were in no hurry to tie the knot though.

“We’d known each other for 17 years before we got married, so it was quite a long friendship!” Joyce said.

Jock was born in nearby Collingwood, where he went to school and has lived at Kaihoka on the family farm for most of his life.

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The property borders the north-western coastline that is regularly pounded by the Tasman Sea.

Nearby, the Kahurangi National Park’s verdant swell of native forest rises and falls over the terrain like its oceanic neighbour.

“My dad came here in 1947, him and his dad bought it,” Jock said.

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“It was originally all rehab farms, very small subsistence farming really.”

A herd of Angus cattle and 2800 Romney ewes graze on grassy hills and flats, bordered by steep rockfaces, creeks and bushy gullies.

No wonder film director and producer Peter Jackson asked Jock if he could film some scenes for The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, at Kaihoka Station.

“I was quite surprised that Jock said yes, because he’s not a people person, doesn’t like crowds, and there was quite a crowd,” Joyce said.

Getting over 70 trucks on to the property for the two-day shoot required a lot of planning and work.

“They widened some gates, put in some bigger culverts to get the trucks in and put in a big gravel place for them to park, which was to our benefit!”

Joyce with one of her milking cows. Photo / RNZ, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Joyce with one of her milking cows. Photo / RNZ, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

It was used as Weatherhills in the scene where The Company arrives at a destroyed farmhouse.

Joyce, who hails from Gisborne, loved being a vet and the work took her all over the country, but she is no longer practising.

“Being a large animal vet’s the best because you’re dealing with farmers, and they’re the best, really.”

She stayed on as a vet after marrying Jock, but Kaihoka was too far from the vet clinic to be working after hours.

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“You’d go to work and come home and you wouldn’t know what’s happened during the day.

“Then the kids were on correspondence school, so that was sort of focused for a number of years.”

There is never a dull day on the farm.

Joyce was feeding chooks when RNZ’s Country Life turned up.

After that, she had a house cow to milk and a mob of baa-ing lambs that needed mothering.

Most were abandoned during tailing.

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Jock busy calf marking in the yard. Photo / RNZ, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Jock busy calf marking in the yard. Photo / RNZ, Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

“Sometimes it’s not so fun when it’s tipping down with rain and it’s wet and you think, ‘who on earth, somebody’s got to milk the house cow’.

“But it’s still something you do, and I quite like that.”

Outside the farm gates, Joyce is heavily involved with the local community.

She is a marriage and funeral celebrant and the newly elected president of Golden Bay Rural Women.

“It’s a really nice fellowship of women.

“My mum came down to live at Pākawau after Dad died and she was part of Rural Women as well as the kids were growing up.”

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There are several farm dogs at Kaihoka. These two can't wait to get to work. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Cattle graze near the rugged coastline. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Joyce can look after up to 80 orphaned lambs a year. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Kaihoka used to be a home to flax mill and coal mine. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
A rain-fed lake on the property. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Moving a herd of cattle at Kaihoka. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Jock with Trooper and Jackson. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
Joyce is also a writer. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes
There's no shortage of feed for this ewe and lamb. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Image 1 of 9: There are several farm dogs at Kaihoka. These two can't wait to get to work. Photo / RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Writing about rural and farming life is another one of Joyce’s passions, and it took a professional turn several years ago.

“I got fed up with our local Nelson Mail.

“Every Wednesday, there was a two-page rural feature, but all the articles in it we’d already read in one of the farming magazines.

“It was just regurgitated.”

She suggested that one week the newspaper could get a local sheep farmer to write something, and the next week they could get a local dairy farmer.

The Mail wrote back and said it was a great idea and asked Joyce to start submitting some work.

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“What was topical, or what we were doing on the farm, or what I thought about the politics or something.

“And then it went on to Stuff, and I was always surprised how popular it was.”

Now Joyce pens columns for the Golden Bay Weekly.

- RNZ

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