18 Apr 2025

Country Life: Farming with a toddler in tow

6:37 am on 18 April 2025
Anna Munro

Charlie and an orphaned lamb Photo: Anna Munro

Mum Anna Munro asks 18-month-old Charlie what to say when they want Rizzo, one of the farm dogs, to make some noise.

"Speak up!" he shouts, then grins cheekily.

The shepherd, photographer and trained physio leases the 450-hectare farm, Cravendale, off her folks with husband Mitch, a builder and endurance athlete, who's had to adapt quickly to day to day farming.

"It's been a big learning curve, no doubt about it, but it's been quite invigorating to put that pressure on yourself to learn fast," he told Country Life.

Anna and Mitch Munro

Charlie, Anna and Mitch Munro Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Anna and Mitch Munro

'Rizzo' Photo: Anna Munro

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The couple took up a five-year lease on the mid-Canterbury farm two years ago, when Anna was was going into her last trimester of pregnancy. Prior to that they were living in Central Otago.

Mitch was building in Wanaka and Anna was working half the week as a shepherd in Tarras and half the week as a physiotherapist.

Starting farming with a big overdraft and bank loan for 2700 ewes and some mixed-age cows, meant they didn't really get ahead in the first year.

Beef and lamb prices had hit rock bottom, so two weeks after giving birth to Charlie, Anna was back to working on the farm with her son.

Anna Munro

Crutching ewes in the woolshed Photo: Anna Munro

"I had him in a wee front pack and he would sleep in a cot in the truck, because basically everything that we came to in the farming calendar was being experienced for the first time by Mitch.

"Mental health-wise, I probably wasn't in the best place. It was so much just having a baby, your first baby, a shock to the system, no sleep, and then having to run a farm."

With meat and wool prices on the rise now, a good cover of grass going into winter and Mitch loving the farming journey, things are looking promising this year.

Anna and Mitch Munro

Tasty kale leaves for lunch Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Anna and Mitch Munro

Mitch Munro with his son Charlie Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

When Country Life turned up, the couple were shifting 650 fine looking two-tooth ewes onto a paddock of kale. Charlie was there too, climbing like a monkey onto the bonnet of the farm truck.

"In the sheep yards, he's started opening all the little gates and climbing up the rails. If you're drafting, you have to keep one eye on him and one eye on the sheep. It's quite a lot at times," Anna said.

Her passion for photography began while she was living in Central Otago.

"Mitch bought a camera to go hunting with but it was way too heavy and I said, 'oh, I might take on the autumn muster'."

Anna and Mitch Munro

'Mt Sunday Muster' Photo: Anna Munro

anna Munro

Photo: Anna Munro

Munro started sharing her photos on social media and realised pretty quickly how much people loved seeing images of high country farming.

"I started a web page called Muster Anna Munro Photography and then sharing pictures of day-to-day farm life. It became a bit of a diary in some ways and a way to share the good news about farming."

Now she exhibits and sells her photographs. One of her favourite images is called 'Blue and Gold', she took it while mustering sheep at Lake Heron Station.

"It's basically these gorgeous tussock hills of gold with blue in the background as you sweep back to the Rakaia and then this tiny little string of merino sheep wandering around the face of the hill."

Anna and Mitch Munro

'Blue and Gold' was taken during the Lake Heron Autumn muster Photo: Anna Munro

Anna and Mitch Munro

Anna pulls out her guitar and sings a song while Mitch moves a mob of sheep Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

Anna Munro

Mitch out on the farm Photo: Anna Munro

Anna and Mitch Munro

Life is beautiful Photo: Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

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