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This book is the story of Mona Anderson's twenty-three years on one of the most isolated sheep farms in New Zealand, a 100, 000-acre station that occupies almost all the country between two great rivers and which runs from their junction back to the Main Divide of the Southern Alps.
Almost at her front door, the Wilberforce River runs in carelessly-braided, thigh-deep channels, or as a treacherous raging flood.
It is the story of an isolated little community of homestead folk, shepherds, cooks, and cowboys; of the good neighbours (the nearest are seven miles down and across THE RIVER) ; of the working year with the merino flock; and of the host of characters and experiences that have marked Mrs. Anderson's years at Mount Algidus, and which are recorded with vivacity, honesty and humor.
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