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Home / The Country

Year in Review: Ford Model A truck a farmers’ market favourite in Waikato and Bay of Plenty

The Country
23 Dec, 2025 04:00 PM3 mins to read

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If you’re tall, the cab is rather cramped and uncomfortable. Photo / Catherine Fry

If you’re tall, the cab is rather cramped and uncomfortable. Photo / Catherine Fry

The Country looks back at some of the biggest and best stories of the past 12 months, including readers’ favourites, news events and those yarns that gave us a glimpse into rural lives and livelihoods across the country.

This story by Catherine Fry of Coast & Country News was originally published on April 20.

Ninety-five years after arriving in New Zealand, an iconic little Ford Model A pick-up truck has come full circle.

After spending its early days taking vegetables to market, it’s now used as a promo vehicle for egg producers James and Karlene Brown and is often spotted at farmers’ markets and supermarkets around the Waikato and Bay of Plenty.

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“We love that we know her history,” James said.

Imported from Ford in the United States in 1930 as a rolling chassis, the Colonial Motor Body Company in Wellington added the cab, deck and trimmings, and there was space for two spare tyres.

The truck’s first owner was a Chinese market gardener from Murchison, in the South Island.

He added a large, wooden flat deck to transport his vegetables to the market in town.

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After several owners and nearing the end of its life, it was saved and lovingly restored in the 1970s by the late John Boyd.

Its Christchurch owner, collector Ian Lamb, helped with the restoration.

A fun vehicle

 The cab has a bench seat and is in mainly original condition.
The cab has a bench seat and is in mainly original condition.

James and Karlene Brown were looking for a fun promo vehicle for the family business, and the Lamb family just happened to be friends of James Brown’s dad.

A chance conversation ended with the Browns buying the truck in 2022.

“She’s still very much in original condition apart from having to replace some worn parts, and a metal wellside deck had replaced the wooden flat deck.

“We had vintage-style branding added to the bodywork.”

James Brown said it was easy to get new parts, or even a new engine, because someone in New Zealand imported them for this popular vehicle.

A talking point

 Little vintage touches abound on the Model A. Photo / Catherine Fry
Little vintage touches abound on the Model A. Photo / Catherine Fry

The Model A has a three-speed gearbox and a four-cylinder engine yielding around 23.3hp.

The 3.3-litre engine can manage about 60km/h at full pelt on the flat.

It wasn’t built for taller people like James Brown and has a small, uncomfortable cab.

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 The special ‘Colonial’ body has room on both sides for a spare tyre. Photo / Catherine Fry
The special ‘Colonial’ body has room on both sides for a spare tyre. Photo / Catherine Fry

“She actually runs really well, but I took her over the Kaimāīs once, and she really struggled up the hills, and I was a bit bent over when I got out.

“I’m never doing it again, and she now travels with the assistance of her own trailer.”

Whether parked up inside a supermarket or at a farmers’ market, the truck is definitely a talking point.

“People share their Model A memories with us.

“We think it’s really cool that she’s still ‘working’ in markets and connecting people with the land and where their food comes from.”

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