Be in to win this Father’s Day with The Shed

There’s going to be one lucky dad this Father’s Day Be in to win a Husqvarna Pressure Washer worth RRP $729 when you subscribe to The Shed magazine. Subscriptions start at only $39! Head here to our own shop magstore.nz to subscribe Enter the code ‘WASHER’ at checkout to enter the draw. Ts & Cs: Entries close 30 September 2025. This offer is open to New Zealand subscriptions only. The winner will be notified by email and have their name published in The Shed magazine.

There’s going to be one lucky dad this Father’s Day
Be in to win a Husqvarna Pressure Washer worth RRP $729 when you subscribe to The Shed magazine.
Subscriptions start at only $39! Head here to our own shop magstore.nz to subscribe
Enter the code ‘WASHER’ at checkout to enter the draw.
Ts & Cs: Entries close 30 September 2025. This offer is open to New Zealand subscriptions only. The winner will be notified by email and have their name published in The Shed magazine.

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From armour to fighter

An unassuming garage in the Hunua Ranges south of Auckland is the current shed of Gordon Turner and home to his latest project – a full-sized replica cockpit of a Messerschmitt Bf 109E fighter plane. Made from plywood, timber and aluminium and five years in the making so far, it will never take to the skies. But it is eventually intended to become a flight simulator, giving the ‘pilot’ a realistic experience of flying one of World War Two’s most famous aircraft.

Revving up Island-style

As you can imagine, on Great Barrier Island, the population is likely to have more than its share of characters, given the island’s remote location. Part of the charm is its lack of power supply and absence of a supermarket. If something breaks, there’s not likely to be a spare part sitting on a shelf anywhere on the Island, so if you don’t want to wait or to pay hefty freight charges on top of the cost of the part, you make one or use real no. 8 wire ingenuity. Even though it is New Zealand’s fourth largest island (after the North, South and Stewart Islands) and is only a half-hour flight from Auckland, it’s like a different world, and that’s why the locals love it.

The Shed magazine June/July 2026 issue 127 on sale now

Murray Belfield is a phenomenon
He has built a few planes over the years, but none gave Murray the performance and thrills he really wanted until he built his scaled-down German paratrooper’s plane, a Storch. Building this rarest of planes consumed nine years of this 86-year-old’s life. And the result? He couldn’t be happier.
For most of us, stalking a deer across the back country, shooting it cleanly and lugging it home to furnish the table would be accomplishment enough for any evening’s bragging rights.
But when that involves landing an aeroplane you built in your shed onto a handkerchief-sized patch of hilltop scrub, finding and shooting the quarry, manoeuvring the carcase into the spare seat and getting off the ground again, and doing all that at the age of 86, bragging just vanishes in the slipstream. Murray Belfield is, anyway, far too practical and busy a guy to waste his evenings boasting to his mates, but he is, nevertheless, a phenomenon. His plane, the second he has built by hand, is another. Highly specialised for short take-offs and landings (STOL), it is a three-quarters-scale replica of a WWII flying legend, the Fieseler Storch.
The replica, designed by famed aircraft engineer Ladislao Pazmany, is so challenging to build that, to Murray’s knowledge, only one other Pazmany model has been completed to the flying stage, by an enthusiast in Alaska. As if that wasn’t a hard enough ask, Murray has incorporated many improvements of his own based on his many years of bush flying experience (and his dislike of fibreglass).