I'm dipping into the my old files of Rickety Bridge history and they include one or two interviews. One I particularly enjoyed was the McNaughts who were then at Stoney Brook farm and doing rather well after their Rickety Bridge experience. When they bought Rickety Bridge, they were living and working in
Grahamstown; Nigel as a doctor and Joy teaching at St Andrew's school.
They
were both from Cape Town and on a visit to the Cape, Nigel found that
Sanddrift/Rickety Bridge was for sale at an attractive price.
When
Joy asked if they could afford it, Nigel told her that if they sold everything
they had, borrowed from all their friends and took a mortgage they could just
manage.
At
first, Nigel’s father and mother moved on to the farm, Nigel’s father
harvesting the fruit and sending it off to market. Unbeknown to them, pear
sizes were critical and the price of grade 3, the smallest, didn’t cover the
cost of sorting and instead of the expected cheque the McNaughts got a bill.
Undeterred, they stuck to the plan and learned more lessons about farming.
www.stonybrook.co.za
Undeterred, they stuck to the plan and learned more lessons about farming.
www.stonybrook.co.za
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