Wairarapa Midweek Wed 11th Nov

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Wairarapa’s locally owned community newspaper

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2020

INSIDE: Meet the belles of the ball P3

P5

Mushroom king retiring ARE YOU A VIP CUSTOMER? Read ‘Garden Yarn’ on Page 9 to find out if you’re one of our winners

2 x $25 GARDENBARN VOUCHERS TO BE WON EACH DAY

ichmond Funeral Home Warmly invite you, your family and your friends to a

FLAIR

CHRISTMAS SERVICE OF REMEMBRANCE

to be held at the RICHMOND CHAPEL, Richmond Rd, Carterton.

Sunday 6th December 2020 at 3pm

THIS IS A COMMUNITY SERVICE AND ALL ARE WELCOME ENQUIRIES TO PETER & JENNY GIDDENS 06 379 7616

FOR ALL YOUR FLOORING NEEDS See our advert in Wairarapa Property 97-101 High St North, Carterton Ph 06 379 4055

A century seen through Alma’s eyes Alma Smith celebrated her 100th birthday last week. ARTHUR HAWKES spent an afternoon chatting to the Masterton centenarian and heard about her fascinating life growing up in rural Wairarapa. Masterton resident Alma Smith, nee Clarke, was born in Greytown, shortly after the First World War. As a girl she was thrown straight into the Great Depression, and then experienced the chaos of the Second World War. More recently, she has seen through the covid-19 lockdown and global coronavirus pandemic. Last Wednesday, on November 4, she celebrated her 100th year, a day before the birthday of her late husband Alan. The family held a party at Dish Cafe for the centenarian last weekend, which was attended by a host of old Masterton families and close friends. Looking back on her century in Wairarapa, Alma said she remembered the “hard work” of farm life in the 1920s and 1930s, and the “terrible job of pulling turnips and cutting thistles”. As a girl, riding in the family’s Ford Model A car to town was a rare treat she thoroughly enjoyed. But there were some jobs where they couldn’t use the novelty of motor power.

... Alma said she remembered the “hard work” of farm life in the 1920s and 1930s, and the “terrible job of pulling turnips and cutting thistles”. Six milk cans a day were transported from the farm by a cart, drawn by their two horses, down to the Lower Valley Dairy Factory at Tuhitarata. In between intensive work on the farm, Alma attended dances regularly, many of which held at the Pirinoa and Kahutara halls. At age 20, in 1941, she became a postal worker, marrying Alan in 1945 as the war still raged in the European and the Pacific theatres. At first, Alma and Alan flatted on Lincoln St in Masterton, later building their own home in 1948. She recalled that the section cost just £48, with the house costing a further £1750 to build. Alma and her daughter Shirley Slykerman showed off the host of

cards she’d received on the big day – from Dame Patsy Reddy, The Queen, the McAnulty family, and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, among many, many others. “I can’t believe I’m 100. I just can’t believe it – I don’t feel it,” said Alma, who still gardens on her property in Lansdowne. Gardening was a skill she learned from her mother, who was a very keen gardener, back on the farm in Greytown when she was a girl. A few decades ago, Alma had to give up one of her favourite Continued on page 3

Alma Smith, who turned 100 on November 4, with her card signed by HRH Queen Elizabeth II. PHOTO/ARTHUR HAWKES

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