Discover Dingleburn
Timaru River Road Lake Hawea, Lake Wanaka
Discover Dingleburn
Let yourself be enchanted. Experience a down-to-earth, exclusive farm stay in a unique high country station in the heart of New Zealands South Island.
Follow the road for forty-five minutes along the eastern side of Lake Hawea and be drawn into the rugged beauty of Dingleburn Station. The drive itself is an experience youll remember, seldom used by anyone other than locals, and youll want to stop from time to time to capture the beauty on camera.
Once you reach Dingleburn Station the views only get more special. This is your own private paradise. Here you will experience an outdoor adventurers playground, set at the head of a glacial valley surrounded by native forests and mountains. Stars will never seem so close and the snow capped tops of the Southern Alps in the west add a backdrop of stunning beauty.
DINGLEBURN STATION
Dingleburn Station is a high country farm of 7000 hectares in the heart of New Zealands South Island. The Mead family run 10000 head of merino sheep which supply super fine quality wool, and they run 300 quality Angus beef cattle.
Davida and Guy Meads ties to this land run deep. As a child Guy lived on the other side of the lake at Benwevis Station where, in 1922, Archibald Mead built a tent camp on the shores of the lake at Meads Landing. In 1954 it was amalgamated with Hunter Valley Station, and the family left the district, but in 1988 Guy returned to the area with his wife Davida to purchase Dingleburn Station, and they moved in with their teenage daughters, Nicky and Brigitte.
Until the early 1960s, Dingleburn Station was only accessible by water and later by air. In the early days the only access to the homestead was by horseback. Wool, heavy equipment and supplies were boated back and forth from Meads Landing across the lake. In the early 1960s the then owner, Ian Sarginson, blasted out the road, part of which went around the treacherous Rocky Point, a most amazing feat.
Mustering sheep off the high top each autumn is one of the highlights of the working year. Traditionally it took gangs of up to six men and their dogs five to six weeks to muster this country, but today with the use of helicopters, the mustering can be completed in days, often with only two musterers. The family still choose to camp out in the mustering huts after a days mustering, cooking over the open fire whilst enjoying a beer, and recalling tales of the high country from days gone by.
Guy and Davida still live at the Dingle as it is affectionately known by friends and family, and their grandchildren are the fifth generation to live on the shores of Lake Hawea. The Mead family have constantly developed the property and the production of super fine merino wool and quality beef cattle. Daughters Bridget and Nicky and their partners have been highly involved in the running of the property.
The Mead family love this environment of snow capped mountains and shadowed valleys, of bush-clad hills spidered by clear flowing streams. This is the tapestry of life that is etched in their souls. They are dedicated to protecting this pristine environment, using a holistic approach to managing the land, plants and animals.
They are now diversifying and opening up the Dingle to welcome others in to experience this very special place.
Room Descriptions
- Discover Dingleburn
- Dingleburn Station is a working high country station , that offers accommodation and access for fun adventures.
Accommodation in the restored shearers quarters is simple and comfortable.
Great for a gathering of friends & family, a cooperate group, wanting an action packed get away, or simply to relax and unwind , in this stunning location, surrounded by the beauty of the Southern Alps. - Book Here