The Shed

HAMMERING HISTORY

You can probably count on the fingers of one hand the number of Kiwi women who have become blacksmiths in their 60s. Judy Waterston of Livingstone, inland North Otago, is one of them.

As a child Judy spent hours in her engineer-father’s workshop sorting nuts and bolts, tidying away his tools, sweeping up, and watching him make things. She says her love of tools and machinery came from her dad.

The blacksmithing seed was sown in 1972 when Judy first saw Nicol’s Blacksmith Shop in Duntroon, some 40km from Oamaru up State Highway 83. The building was being devoured by periwinkle planted 100 years before to act as a fire retardant. Most of the windows were smashed and it was draped in cobwebs.

It took her 20 years to escape the city and return to North Otago, near Duntroon

“I looked through the broken windows and when

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Shed

The Shed16 min read
The Shed That Ate The House
If your shed is larger – much larger – than your house, is it still a shed? This is a question Marty and Zoe Radford might well ponder in their spare time – if they had any. Their house, a well-furnished, modern two-level dwelling, is built into a co
The Shed10 min read
The Magnificent Seven
Additional photography courtesy of Athanasius Santamaria When Athanasius (Athow) Santamaria made an “impulse decision”, to buy a pile of old Austin parts in 2015, he didn’t really have a project in mind. At the time, he was a freshly minted DOC range
The Shed3 min read
Tinnitus
One of the things guitar legend Eric Clapton and I have in common is tinnitus. Eric blames the years he spent in the band Cream, playing in front of the bass speakers of fellow band member Jack Bruce, who always had his amplifier turned up to 11. One

Related Books & Audiobooks