On a private sheep station just south of Queenstown—275 Kingston-Garston Highway, Kingston 9748—the Real Country Farm Show compresses a life of farm practice into a tight, 45‑minute, hands-on encounter. Guests step off the roadside and into working paddocks where alpacas, horses, deer and flocks of sheep move with the deliberate rhythm of stock that have grazed Southland tussock for generations. The setting feels open: wide pasture, distant ridgelines and often a glimpse of Lake Wakatipu or the Remarkables depending on the light.
This is not a staged display; it’s authentic station life delivered by local farmers who keep groups intentionally small so everyone can participate. You’ll watch a farmer work dogs—both the high-drive Huntaway and the precise Heading dog—muster stock with low, economical commands and sudden, controlled movement. The dog demonstrations reveal how handlers and dogs read terrain and animal behavior; for anyone who loves technique, it’s mesmerizing.
The hands-on elements are immediate and rewarding. Under instruction you’ll try cracking a stock whip, feel the heft of a lead rope, and safely pat curious alpaca and placid horses. A farmer-led walk through the yards explains seasonal lambing rhythms, fencing techniques and the difference between station tasks and hobby farming. The pace is brisk but intimate: questions are encouraged, and you often come away with a small, practical lesson—how to move quietly beside a herd, or why certain grass types matter for stock weight.
Families and solo travelers alike value the small-group format and approachable hosts. Sessions are ideal for people who want a tactile slice of rural New Zealand without committing to a full-day farm stay. It’s also an instructive counterpoint to Queenstown’s adrenaline offerings: here the draw is skill, routine and animal intelligence.
Practical notes: the meeting point is 275 Kingston-Garston Highway, Kingston 9748. Allow 45 minutes for the experience; bring closed-toe shoes and a windproof layer for variable Southern Alps weather. All guests must sign a disclaimer on arrival.
Beyond the activities, the station connects visitors to a broader agricultural landscape shaped since the 1800s by sheep farming and small stations. Visiting responsibly—sticking to paths, following hygiene rules around animals, and listening to the farmer—helps keep animals healthy and the station productive. For anyone seeking a grounded, tactile encounter with rural Aotearoa, this compact farm show offers a vivid, unvarnished introduction.
Because groups stay small, you’ll have time to ask about station economics, seasonal work and how climate variability affects winter feed. Children respond well to the dogs and animals under supervision, and the farmer adapts demonstrations to suit ages and mobility. Tours run year-round but timing shifts with farming seasons; check availability on booking and arrive early to find the parking area and sign the waiver safely.