North & South

SPIRITED AWAY

Jo James was… well, she doesn’t like to reveal exactly how old she was when a babysitter introduced her to gin, but she was amazed by how much it tasted like hairspray.

“I remember wondering why people drank this stuff, then thinking, actually, it’s curiously delicious hairspray.”

Let’s just say her youthful flirtation with “Gordon” pre-dates her relationship with husband Dave James, who she first met on her 16th birthday, although they’d once lived on the same street in New Plymouth as younger kids.

It wasn’t until the early 80s that they officially became a couple, while studying at Massey University (science with a double major in microbiology and genetics for her; food technology with a major in engineering for him). But there was a certain symmetry to the path their life took in 2016 when they decided to move home to Taranaki after 18 years in Australia and learn something new. “We wanted to be back in our own place, with our own mountain,” says Dave, who was working as a sustainability manager for Fonterra in Melbourne.

He was keen on ballroom dancing; they toyed with the idea of growing dahlias. Then Dave got quite serious about

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

More from North & South

North & South1 min read
Another Year
As the country’s orchards and vineyards gear up for a bumper harvest — places like Marlborough, Martinborough and Hawke’s Bay have seen perfect growing conditions this season — owners are again desperate for workers and there are fears for the second
North & South4 min read
The Urbanist
If you poke your head inside The Urban Winery, a wine bar and cellar door in Napier’s Ahuriri marina, the first thing you’ll spy is a massive wooden egg. Nestled inside the stylish, art deco Rothmans Building, it glows a pale gold in the dark, lit up
North & South2 min read
Four Corners
John Wotherspoon is feeling a bit conflicted. The Department of Conservation’s Nelson Lakes operations manager has no love lost for the Douglas fir — he’s spent the past 20 years removing the invasive pine from St Arnaud as part of a wider programme

Related Books & Audiobooks