Since her Parapara farm was featured on Country Calendar Tarn Chisholm has had lots of people wanting to come and visit.
The farm, 30km from Wanganui on SH4, was featured in the TV programme on September 5. One of the aspects covered was Ms Chisholm and her friend Jewels Davey's business, Girls Go Country.
It offers farmstays for people who want to experience riding, hunting, mustering and shearing and eating foods like venison and smoked eels.
The two met at the Kai Iwi Open Pig Hunt weigh-in about three years ago, and bonded over pig hunting and mustering on Ms Chisholm's farm. Their farmstay business wasn't busy before, but since the programme Ms Chisholm has had at least 30 inquiries.
She's planning to lure Moira Wainwright, a professional horse trainer from Wanganui's Actifun Riding School, to be a part of the horse trekking side.
She is considering selling off part of the farm and using the money to improve visitor accommodation and tracks. It would allow her to take people to the back of the farm in a 4WD vehicle and also free her up to do more of the work she enjoys.
"I would have more time for horses, dogs and guests instead of fixing a fence."
The programme was filmed in May, before June's heavy rain. The weather was fine and the sheep and beef farm looked wonderful.
On air Ms Chisholm told how she moved to the farm five years ago with her husband, and had to buy him out when they split up. She then ran the farm on her own, with Miss Davey's help.
A lot of help has been needed for the last year, after Ms Chisholm "shredded her muscles" in a flat-out day pressing bales during shearing. She wasn't able to do any lifting for a year. Soon after recovering she was back in hospital with concussion, after being bucked off a horse.
She told viewers how a big chunk of her steepest land is now in pine trees, in a joint venture with Horizons Regional Council, and how that has allowed her to increase production on the rest of her farm.
There was footage of her harnessing Clydesdale horses, from her stud, and she spoke of her passion for working them.
It's a slightly different picture now. The June rain has caused many slips on the farm. Some are in the newly planted forest, where trees are now 2m tall. There was also damage to tracks and fences, and Ms Chisholm has applied to the Mayoral Relief Fund for help to fix them.