NZGrower I June 2022

Page 14

YOUR INDUSTRY

FINDING THE BALANCE BETWEEN MOTHERHOOD AND CAREER Elaine Fisher

Molly Shaw enjoys New Zealand’s great outdoors

“What could be better? I love berry crops and working with a beautiful crop is a draw. They make people happy and they are healthy too,” says plant scientist Molly Shaw of Berryworld Ltd. Molly is in a role she loves because she deliberately chose to continue to work part-time while raising her two children, who are now 11 and eight. Born in New York State, Molly came to New Zealand with her structural engineer husband and 18-month-old son in 2012. “When you hear the words New York you think of the city, but the state is large and the part of the country where I grew up reminds me of north of Auckland with its rolling hills, and green fields with cows and trees between,” says Molly who is also a member of Women in Horticulture. Molly’s father, a GP, decided in his 50s to retrain as an electrician, and her mother, who has a biology degree and was a primary school teacher, became a full-time mum for the family of four girls. “When the last of my sisters left home, I watched my mum fail to go back to her career, from which she had been away for more than two decades. While I saw she had not lost touch, 12  NZGROWER : JUNE 2022

she had lost confidence. That reinforced to me not to give up my career when I had children.” It was Molly’s father who encouraged her to follow her interest in plants and attend Cornell University, a statesponsored research university in New York state, which offered a plant science degree. “Cornell is a big extension university where, in addition to research and teaching, a lot of the professors work with farmers and carry out research of benefit to them.” It was field trips with those professors, in particular her favourite professor, berry specialist Dr Marvin Pritts, that inspired Molly to pursue a similar career. To do so she needed a master’s degree. Reluctant to spend any more time than necessary studying, Molly completed both her undergraduate and master’s degrees in just four years. “I wouldn’t advise anyone to do that. You never get those years of your life back. I didn’t do an OE, Peace Corps or any of those things most young people do.” For eight years after graduation, Molly worked as a fruit and vegetable extension educator. After the birth of her first child, Molly appreciated how critical it was for her to have a life outside the home, and returned to work part-time.


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