Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Tree Crop Farm in Avenues Magazine November !


The November issue of Avenues had a great write up on places around Akaroa and Banks Peninsula. The best part of course was on Akaroa Accommodation - TreeCropFam !

You can click on the picture to enlarge and the article is below...

"In Akaroa, a trip up Rue Grehan takes you back to nature.
Once parked outside Lynnie Alexander's Tree Crop Farm and Bohemian Love Shacks, all you hear
is the gentle rush of the stream's journey.
"What I'm trying to create is a rough and ready New Zealand Paradise that suits me , with lots of things to eat and smell and look at.
I'd like to present  it in a more pristine way, like something out of a glossy magazine, but you need a lot of staff for that."

Instead, Lynnie runs the accommodation business herself, with a few extra hands on call to keep the four huts  ship shape, the woodpiles stacked, and the garden somewhat restrained.
In her 60's, ( although you wouldn't pick it,) Lynnie has a life story peppered with remarkable tales.
 After marrying a Dutchman,  she lived in Amsterdam until she had  her son Sebastian (now 26)  and the homesickness became too much.
 While her next stop was Otago, where she had built a house with her father a few years before, she wrote two travel books, then her fond memories of Akaroa holidays in the Glen  eventually lured her back to the Peninsula  to write for the Akaroa Mail weekly newspaper.

For the first two years she remained on the Akaroa side of the Hill top never venturing into the big smoke because she was so preoccupied.
"I don't know if I could do it now, because I'm madly in love with the Westfield Mall," she admits.
Despite Lynnie's love of manicured nails and stiletos, home is a 150 yrear old  navy blue cottage, with wattle and daube walls, and open fires.
"It's reminiscent of life in a bedouin tent, mixed with  The Lord of the Rings film sets, working class colonial New Zealand, and a nostalgia for the medieval."

She stumbled on her current abode quite by chance.
"I was living in the Giants House (Linton, of Akaroa) and I had a horse. I rode it up the road one day and saw this cottage . I thought Wow, I wonder if they'd sell it".
While the property was not on the market , Lynnie persevered and two weeks later it was hers. The surprise was that the title wasn't just for the hectare around the house but for 22 hectares stretching up a nearby hill and encompassing native forest and walktracks.

Lynnie capitalised on the walktracks, as the ability to walk out the door and wander the countryside for hours  was what she loved  most  about their holiday house in Derbyshire in England.
She thought "Why can't  we have these walktracks in new Zealand?"
Armed with a $2000 council grant, Lynnie and her horse roamed the peninsula to determine the most rewarding routes. The result was 15 established tracks that are used today.
"That was my dream, to have a piece of property with walktracks criss crossing over it."

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Another Great Review for Tree Crop Farm


We just got word of another review on a personal blog.

It is really well written and has some great pictures.

A part of it is below (pictures and text copyright of it's owner);

on one of the days in Akaroa... we went to this rustic garden in Akaroa. It really is a niche bed & breakfast for new/young newlyweds for a romantic romp, cuz they have several huts to rent out... and its really cozy, romantic, back to nature kind of retreat... super carefree host, in a very laid back non intrusive nature...

But we went there to look and wander around the gardens... Entrance to the place was NZ$10 per adult which included a refreshing drink.


Julie and I loved the place... for its rough / back to nature style and really rustic atmosphere... Julies dad and sis-in-law didn't quite take to it... but nevertheless... it was beautiful... the gardens all filled with wild flowers and many other kinds of fauna...

We also saw a huge gigantic fern... donno what type BUT it was HUGE...

If you would like to read more - and I recommend this as it is really well written and unbiased !- please click on the snapshot below.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Akaroa's TreeCropFarm - See The Video Blog !

See us at TreeCropFarm !!

Our video blog has been uploaded and can be played by clicking the play button below.
It shows Tree Crop Farm Akaroa in lupins and shows the amazing huts you can stay in....

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Gardening On The Edge - Tree Crop Farm 22/11/08



Gardening On The Edge Christchurch Press Gardening Feature November 22nd 2008


I have a beloved Canterbury friend who has had Garden Tours for over 30 years,
with over 300 hundred roses on four acres of garden around a pond that leaves Monet's for dead!
At the beginning of the season in late October, the night before a big bus tour, she gets out the frozen ginger kisses, polishes up the silver teapots, lays out the cups and, just before dark, she goes out and cuts off all the roses from the few that she can't remember the names of !

"I'm not having all these ladies coming tomorrow asking me the names of roses they already know the name of, just to catch me out"
and we, her gardening neighbours, assembled to give moral support for the big day, would fall about shrieking on the grass!

I know how she feels though. You are staring at a rose, and you know it so well, but the name just will not come, and some of those Austins they keep churning out year after year, are just so so damnably similar!

It didn't matter so much when almost every one visiting gardens was getting on in years, but that is no longer the case. Garden tours are de rigeur for the young because its a great day out, and lets face it, cheap as chips for what you get.

Take a moment to pity the often traumatised owners of the gardens trying to create art on a flapping canvas, and all slightly paranoid that you will think their garden is lacking or not worthy.
When a garden writer comes and does your garden with a photographer, they seek out the most delicious vignettes, and the article never shows where you tried to hide the mountain of weeds, or the sacks of this and piles of that.

But a garden tour is more like being visited by investigative journalists, sometimes over 100 of them over a weekend.
They have the opportunity to notice everything.. unwashed cars, spider webs, rubbish in bags behind corners, spray that drifted ...an old essential shed full of things you wish you didnt own, a potager that just is not perfect, the dead heading that has just not been done, and a dog that has done something where he shouldn't in the pea straw between the time you had a last check around, and when the bus arrived.

So back to the roses... cutting off the ones you dont know to save face will not work in late November ..we've had some Show Weekend weather and anything that can bloom is doing so.
Visitors will be able to identify and name away to their hearts content particularly in Akaroa where gardeners work in the moonlight to keep up with the local rose queen Barbara Lea Taylor.

Further out, gardens that face the easterly wind on the peninsula have to play a different ball game, but have the undeniable bonus of the borrowed landscape .
Most of them could stop gardening tomorrow and still have a vista around them that would never pall. I often wonder why those looking over the Alps or the sea in Christchurch dont just leave it at that, a million dollar plus view with a few pots of parsley and a jasmine somewhere. Gllian Polson who set up the herb Farm in Akaroa over 30 years ago always said that one day she would just open the gate and let the sheep right up to the door, and she did, and the place is still lovely.

Decanter Bay homestead garden developed by self taught nurseryman Ernst and Christine Rudin-Jones has one of those locations people in New York city can only fantasise about, also with roses in the right places, but they have concentrated on a garden that does not block out the beach or the riveting Decanter Rocks at the head of the bay ,and yet is still sheltered for people activites from the wind.

Look for the koru circle, and the labour of love rock wall , the romantic winding woodland path from the beach, and other wait till you see them follies that are the result of ten years living and working flat out, as well as meticulously renovating the early colonial cottage into a home that I could shift to tomorrow !

Theres a ancient gig seat found in a paddock and semi restored on the verandah looking down to the beach, but given the work gone into this garden which was just a thistle paddock when they arrived, its unlikely they have ever sat on it!
Ernst has specialised in native plantings around spacious curving lawns and niches for Band B guests to hang out in hammocks, get married in the sunken garden, or take bush baths surrounded by fragrant herbs and climbers.

It is reached by a narrow tar sealed road that will test those with vertigo. It winds in from Little Akaloa up and around a seascape below like something out of a Indiana Jones movie, so dont let your driver get too chatty about the view! Tell them to keep their eyes on the road ahead.

You drive almost to the beach and there amidst the ubiquitous cabbage trees, norfolk pines, flaxes, even a phoenix palm, giant echiums and arum lilies, are specimen macrocarpas.
The grassy esplanade strip along the rocky beach you can could get to from the kitchen holding a latte in 30 seconds .

For Christchurch visitors there is now an extra frisson of course, for this part of the world is now part of your city!


Back to roses again. There was a tantalisingly difficult to identify tea rose turned part climber on the brick patio . I took a bloom and rang Jill Harris who farmed there with her famous for growing his own tobacco on site husband Tad Harris back in 1948. The rose was a wedding present and Jill said it was a one word name, and not Birthday Present!
I've come up with a grower, Francis Meilland, who developed a rose called Tassin named after a village in France near Lyons in 1942 .It would have been on the market in NZ by 1948 and probably very fashionable as a gift. Its sweetly fragrant, dark red, sun burning blackish and healthy dull leathery leaves...Can someone looking at this rose in Decanter confirm my hunch, and I don't mind being humbled if an alternative verdict is the outcome!

Another garden on the edge is at Fishermans Bay behind Akaroa on the Long Bay Road and past The Hinewai Reserve. It is literally as far as you can drive on the Peninsula and a shipwrecked half dead ,couldnt speak english fisherman once climbed the cliffs and knocked on the door of a flabbergasted Lesley Brown who lived there before Jill and Richard Simpson. He was looking for something to eat and she just happened to be making the school lunches!

Beautiful brown cows grudgedly shifted off the gravel road on the way in, but once again the view is the thing, only this one is from on high.

There is an infinity pool off the deck with a difference.
This one is not brimming silent water, its the Pacific Ocean with rocks and breakers smashing on the rocks far below. It was all I could do to drag myself away and follow artist and plantswoman Jill around the acres of native plantings specialising in hebes that again has taken ten years of up early, bed late, and much credit must go to Richard who is also still farming, and must have been handed a list as long as a tow rope some mornings .
Peastraw has been the key apparently and many truckloads and trailer loads of it.

Jill catches me staring into the distance.
"You're no different to anyone else"
" When I take people around the paths and tracks they are not listening to me talking, I know they are all looking at the view and talking about the sunrises, but don't think we dont know we are lucky"

Jill is a nurserywoman from way back and also an artist.Her studio in the remodelled by an architect farm house for open plan vast tiled floors living, is an obvious testament to her love of Planet Earth and she has indulged in her passion for garden iron art , some very large pieces to fit the scale of the landscape , a treat around every corner, and always on the lookout for more.

They have saved the gooseberries, raspberries and fruit trees from the Browns and frankly its a rural idyll. Perennials have not been forgotten, nor the huge potager and its all been done on the lay down the peastraw and wait a year philosophy.There are tractors and picturesque remains of generations of farming life.

Look for the plain corrugated iron shed because when you open the door your'e in for an historic treat.Its the original woolshed, and inside there is room for over 100 people to sit down to a wedding breakfast ...oops I forgot... back at Ernst and Christines is another little treat ..their dog has a near secret place he goes to have a bit of privacy and a lie down .see if you can spot it !


Lynnie Alexander
Tree Crop Farm
Akaroa

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Akaroa Accommodation - About Tree Crop Farm in Christchurch Star.

Gardening with Cynthia Kepple
20.04.2007

By CYNTHIA KEPPLE
"This is amazing! Are there any more gardens like this in New Zealand?" The question came from a middle aged British woman wandering Tree Crop farm in Akaroa. She was clicking off photos with a long lensed camera.

“I very much doubt it,” was my reply. Like the elegant dark haired tourist, I was wandering gobsmacked through the rampant yet ravishing wilderness that is the domain of the somewhat bohemian and extremely colourful Lynne Alexander.

I’d heard of this unusual garden-come-farm-come-romantic back-to-nature-luxury-retreat-for lovers through a couple who’d stayed in one of the secluded accommodation huts for an anniversary.




I rang Lynne – mine host, gardener and tree crop farmer, who I later discovered was also an author and former journalist and TV and radio producer – to ask if I could visit her garden for a story.
At the height of the tourist season she was in full “looking after house guest” mode and had little time to talk, but invited me to wander around by myself to take a look.

It was a walk on the wild side.

What I discovered was a garden that unashamedly captures all the senses. There was the background melody from the gurgling stream and the gentle castanet buzz of sleepy insects.

A tangle of sweetpeas, a toss of dahlias, artichoke forests, and expanses of wildflowers captured the eye.

The scent of honeysuckle and borage mingled with that of lavender, while mint and lemon balm brushed against you as you wandered the narrow pathways.

And if you didn’t pick a leaf from the abundant herbs that grew both in a proliferation of pots and wild and free, you’d be offered one as a garnish to the refreshing drink – coffee, hot chocolate or delicious fresh berry juice – that came with the $12 entrance fee.

The garden is labelled “wilderness country’’ by its owner and designer and with a little research I discovered it has its own philosophy – French impressionist meets Kiwi.

It was inspired by Renoir’s garden at Cagnes, which was organised to provide produce for the Renoir family as well as to be a place for personal growth.

There are many of the traditional elements of a great garden, too. It’s just that they are “deconstructed” with the haphazard flair of a gardener who dares to be different and let nature have a hand.

Doves flutter in dovecotes high on the hill and keep an eye on the comings and goings at the historic 1850s wattle and daub main house where Lynne and her helpers serve breakfasts and afternoon teas.

A somnolent pond boasts a large gilded fish monument – a tongue-in-cheek token to the golden fountains of famous French gardens – and the adventurous visitor is inevitably tempted to enter the rustic, semi-covered walkway, an artfully constructed avenue of manuka branches encrusted with vines and climbing roses.

Old roses, running free, are a special feature of the garden – as are sumptuous lilies, at full bloom in mid summer.

Closer to the homestead chooks and their chickens roam the paths and an abandoned yacht, Myth, adds a quirky touch.

The beguiling garden is just part of the Tree Crop Farm experience.

There are the hidden, private retreats (think sheepskins, chandeliers and outdoor baths), numerous walking tracks, and the farmhouse from whence Lynne, amidst an array of colonial bric-a-brac, magazines and an eclectic selection of CDs, manages her 50-acre domain.

And no story on Tree Crop Farm would be complete without mention of the ever-changing selection of quotes from Lynne and guests. Appearing on rafters, walls, and even throughout the garden, Lynne periodically publishes them as a book.

# Postscript: This Easter, with summer nearly over I took a twilight walk up the valley and stumbled unexpectedly onto Tree Crop Farm. Yellow light filtered softly from windows, music wafted through the country air, and here and there amongst the trees, woodsmoke from hidden chimneys drifted gently skyward. The garden, still green and lush, was at pleasantly at peace.


Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Akaroa Accommodation - TCF Gets A Great Review

Akaroa Accommodation - Tree Crop Farm gets a brilliant review from the great travel site "Runaway Now"



Click on the screen shot to the left to see the original review.









Tree Crop Farm is a romantic little B&B made up of a small farm house and 3 standalone cottages, all nestled snuggly into the Akaroa hillside.

My partner and I stayed in one of the cottages on a cold and rainy weekend which made it all the more enjoyable to be rugged in front of an open fire.

Using the outdoor bath in the rain was a definite highlight, heated with a small wood fire sitting underneath the cast iron tub complete with specifically built smoke stack.

Hens and their chicks roam around the garden that is appears wild and over-run with Forget-me-nots and Poppies. The chickens lay eggs that are served for breakfast to the guests.

Tree Crop Farm’s indoor and outdoor dining areas also operates as a cafe during the day. The spaces are filled with all kinds of nick-knacks and with every inch of wall space covered with quotes and sayings written in chalk by owner and super-nice host Lynne Alexander.

http://www.treecropfarm.com




Visit the review at Runaway Now to see the slide show of incredible pictures by Jamie McLellan

_________________________________________


Another Review can be found in the Lonely Planet guide;


“ Don’t miss the fabulously quirky Tree Crop Farm Park (03 304 7158 www.treecropfarm.com $10 admission 10am - 5pm in good weather only) 1.5km off the main road through Akaroa.
This private, flower filled wilderness garden is perfect for a wander on established tracks, or you can relax on the sheepskin covered couches on the ramshackle verandah, flicking through magazines, playing a board game or simply reading witticisms written all over the walls. A drink and snack is included in the admission price ( The berry juice is divine) ; rustic, romantic accommodation is also available here. ”




From The Lonely Planet Guide.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Recession Busters at Tree Crop Farm !


Recession Decisions To make sure we don't lose our hardest hit Canterbury clients during the recession, we have chosen one hut that is very popular AND NO LESS LOVELY THAN THE OTHERS, but will be cheaper than usual.


In fact we've dropped between $40 and $140 on all the huts, but the Bedouin Creek Hut is the smallest and will be dropping the most. With the change, guests in the Bedouin Creek Hut will now do their own baths and fires and also forgo afternoon tea and breakfast and just collect a latte and roll or hot chocolate, herb tea or berry juice when they check out ...or pop over to the cafe kitchen and collect it whenever.....

The check out time still applies 12 noon , but those staying more than one night can come over any time of day for their coffees or hot and cold drinks.
We will continue to deliver the breakfast tray to the Verandah Hut and breakfast trays can be collected by guests to take back to the Lost Weekend Hut and Tree House.

We think this new system will work as when people can stay in bed all morning we are never sure when its the right time to drop over the tray.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

.....and some people prefer to be left alone completely and to have their coffee on the Cafe verandah when they have packed up and ready to roll for the day.�

Be sure to check out out Photo Gallery, you can find the link to the right.