High Heels And Gumboots
By (Author) Rebecca Hayter
HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand)
HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand)
2nd April 2025
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
The countryside, country life: general interest
Rural communities
Agriculture and farming
Autobiography: arts and entertainment
630.92
Paperback
288
Width 153mm, Height 235mm, Spine 22mm
396g
In search of the country girl within, Rebecca Hayter left Auckland on a whim to buy a 10-acre property in Golden Bay, with zero farming experience. What could possibly go wrong
Journalist Rebecca Hayter always dreamed about one day returning to where she grew up, in Golden Bay. What she didn't plan to do was buy a farm to run by herself. But when a beautiful house and farm captured her heart, she traded in her city high heels for gumboots.
The 10-acre property, which she called Oceanspirit, had a massive vege garden, native bush, a creek and wetlands, a large orchard, paddocks and a cottage. Its long driveway ran down to the beach which was her road access to the local settlement. In heavy storms and high spring tides, Rebecca had no vehicle access at all.
Based on the author's column of the same name (Best Columnist/Blogger in Media 2020 for North & South), this is a candid, hilarious, heartbreaking and heartwarming story of a woman learning the realities of life on the farm and finding confidence in new skills and in herself.
Rebecca Hayter grew up in the rural community of Golden Bay and loved sharing her classmates' farming lifestyles. However, she was also passionate about writing. She graduated from the University of Auckland with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in English in 1985, but doubted her ability to make writing a career. In 1990, aged 26, she nursed her father through terminal cancer - the intensely personal experience provided clarity and encouraged her to pursue writing and sailing. Within two years, Rebecca had completed a Diploma in Short Story Writing, followed by a Certificate in Journalism. She began writing for Boating New Zealand and bought a 26ft yacht which provided an unofficial course in DIY - skills that would later prove useful on her lifestyle block. She joined Boating New Zealand as yachting editor in 1998 and became its first woman editor a year later. She led a major overhaul of the magazine to win 2006 Editor of the Year - Supreme Overall Winner. After more than 12 years over two terms as editor, she resigned to return to her rural roots and buy Oceanspirit, the small farm which would be her home for the next seven years. She now lives in Nelson, keeps her launch Nantucket at Waikawa and continues to write about boats.