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Sell with usBound by three wild rivers and framed by the peaks of the Southern Alps, Mount Algidus Station is a world apart – nearly 54,000 acres of high-country wilderness shaped by time and cared for with purpose. The Wilberforce, Mathias and Rakaia rivers define its edges, their alpine waters carving the contours that make this place so distinctive.
First settled in 1861 through the amalgamation of four pioneering runs, Mount Algidus Station has become one of New Zealand’s most remarkable rural estates. More than 65 kilometres of river frontage, tracts of native forest, crystal springs and wetlands sit alongside well-tended paddocks – a balance of wilderness and enterprise that has long defined Mount Algidus Station. From above, the property unfurls like a tapestry of braided rivers, terraces and rolling foothills reaching toward the jagged horizon of the Main Divide.
From its rich pastures, generations have forged a powerhouse of New Zealand agriculture. Angus cattle and Perendale sheep thrive across the valleys and terraces, their quality reflecting more than a century of farming excellence. Fed by alpine water and fertile soils, the land delivers strength and vitality season after season. A better amphitheatre for life and work could scarcely be imagined.
The station’s infrastructure – woolsheds, yards and back-country huts – carries the fingerprints of those who have worked this land and contributed to what the station is today. Well-kept tracks and elegant residences make its vastness feel liveable and connected.
At its heart stands Mount Algidus Station Manor, a hand-cut stone residence designed by architect Charlie Nott. Inspired by the manor houses of Normandy yet at ease in its alpine landscape, it feels both grand and timeless. Warm in winter and sunlit in summer, the manor features five spacious double bedrooms, a library, drawing room and poolhouse – a home built to endure, a place to pause and breathe the high-country air.
Nearby, the Farmhouse offers refined guest accommodation, while heritage buildings such as the woolshed and shearers’ quarters preserve the property’s working roots.
Mount Algidus is alive with movement and purpose. Salmon and brown trout run through clear alpine rivers, while wild red deer and chamois roam the hills. Horse-riding, fly-fishing and back-country exploration are part of daily life here.
Among the many chapters in Mount Algidus’s story, none is more famous than that of Mona Anderson MBE, who lived here from the 1940s. Her bestselling memoirs A River Rules My Life and The Good Logs of Algidus captured the essence of high-country life and introduced this extraordinary place to the nation. Through her eyes, the station became not just a farm but a symbol of New Zealand’s spirit – self-reliant, good-humoured and quietly proud. Her words remind us how people and place shape one another.
Mount Algidus is more than a farm – it is a legacy, a living testament to the vision of those who have tended it for more than 160 years. Combining productivity, privacy and natural splendour on a scale rarely seen, it stands as one of New Zealand’s most remarkable high-country estates.
Here rivers still carve their patient paths, mountains keep their watch, and the land continues to reward those who understand its rhythm. The same waters that once defined its isolation now sustain its vitality – a place where heritage, wilderness and human endeavour exist in lasting harmony.
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