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Home / The Country

Smedley Station’s new education hub built by cadets with timber grown on farm

Michaela Gower
By Michaela Gower
Multimedia Journalist, Hawke's Bay Today·Hawkes Bay Today·
16 Jun, 2024 06:00 PM3 mins to read

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Wairarapa farmers discuss climate change and how they're tackling it

Cadets at Smedley Station and Cadet Training Farm in Tikokino, Central Hawke’s Bay are ticking off big projects one new build at a time.

The students and resident licensed builder Mark Winlove finished building the new education hub in 2023 and are now building a six-stand wool shed and covered yards on Smedley’s Farm at Parks Peak.

Situated 40km west of Waipukurau, the sheep, cattle, bull-beef and deer training farm had its first intake of cadets in 1931 and accepts 13 students each year for a two-year cadetship on the four-block operation.

Smedley cadets cut and milled the pine, tōtara and redwood timber used to build the education hub.
Smedley cadets cut and milled the pine, tōtara and redwood timber used to build the education hub.

The education facility was constructed using a mixture of pine, tōtara and redwood grown and milled on the property and features a classroom and boardroom, visitor accommodation, and a semi-commercial kitchen and office spaces.

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Rob Evans, the manager for nine years and a former Smedley cadet, said the connection to the build was something they encouraged with the students and they were involved with the entire “full-circle” process.

Rob Evans said the new education hub would offer a great learning space for cadets. Photo / Michaela Gower
Rob Evans said the new education hub would offer a great learning space for cadets. Photo / Michaela Gower

“They cut the trees down, milled them, built it and replanted the block.”

Evans said the pine used was 25-26 years old, however, didn’t know the age of the redwood and tōtara trees, but could tell from the size they were a decent age.

The building hadn’t had its official opening but had already been used by Smedley for its latest open day in June, which had around 350 visitors.

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The new woolshed and covered yards currently under construction would replace the Parks Peak woolshed that burnt down in December 2022.

“We’d hope that the woolshed and yards would be operational by the end of winter, so we can do the next main shear in that shed,” Evans said.

Smedley cadets are building a six-stand woolshed and covered yards on the Parks Peak farm.
Smedley cadets are building a six-stand woolshed and covered yards on the Parks Peak farm.

A strong focus of the cadets’ learning is about shearing and Evans said they would shear 14,000 sheep a year themselves.

“It’s an opportunity for them if they wanted to travel the world – they can travel the world on a handpiece.”

The first-year cadets worked on the woolshed, while the second-year cadets helped with the education hub.

“We try to expose them to as much as we can and keep the real traditional stuff with a horse and dog and teach those disciplines.”

Evans said both facilities would provide a comfortable learning environment and enable the students to be work-ready when they left.

Michaela Gower joined Hawke’s Bay Today in 2023 and is based out of the Hastings and Central Hawke’s Bay newsrooms. She covers Dannevirke and Hawke’s Bay news and has a love for sharing stories about farming and rural communities.

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