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New Faces at Bay Inn

Couple takes over one of NZ's most remote watering holes

Michaela Gower

'The men used to get together on a Friday night in the hall and have a few drinks and it brought the community together and showed the value of having a local meeting point'.

It was a conversation with a friend over a game of golf that got Herbertville man John Sedcole thinking. The Herbertville Inn, arguably one of the North Island's most remote watering holes, was in need of a new publican.

Five families from the area had purchased the pub in 2024, so the community did not lose the facility, and put it up for lease. Sedcole and partner Miki were in need of a reason to stay in the coastal Tararua settlement that they love, despite the hour's drive from the nearest large towns of Dannevirke and Waipukurau.

Having already worked as the campground manager for three years, he put the idea to Miki. "She said 'What is there to lose and they will either take us or they won't." Since then, they have been in the process of transitioning from "one side of the bar to the other" and as of the beginning of March, made it official.

Sedcole said he and Miki were excited to work for themselves for the first time and perceived the move to be "slowing down" from life at the campground.

The couple said they planned to keep the Herbertville Inn largely the same, but wanted to find ways to put their stamp on it, too, especially because they I will live on-site. "Miki is going to be doing the cooking...she is Japanese so she has got a couple of dishes that she will probably introduce into the community." The inn has also been refurbished "from the front door to the back" with a simple goal- to get it up and running again for locals and visitors. "This is right in the middle of the settlement the campground is just across the road and there are a few baches down the road and those people needed somewhere to gather and have a talk."

He said this became particularly pertinent in the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle, which left the property damaged.  The men used to get together on a Friday night in the hall and have a few drinks and it brought the community together and showed the value of having a local meeting point."

John said the official opening of the Herbertville Inn was planned for Easter Saturday and following that they would be open Wednesday to Saturday after they had got themselves up and running.

The two things John said he asked for from locals and visitors were patience and respect as they navigated this journey.

"We are new to this job so people are going to have to give us a bit of time and be a bit patient with us at times."