New Zealand, up until the years immediately following WW2, was a largely agraian country and our cities were pretty sparse places
A great many Kiwis lived and worked "on the land" and a farmhouse or farm-worker's house adjacent to the sheep-shearing shed was so common as to be completely invisible. Often the sheepyards, shearing shed etc, would be accompanied by a few small "holding" paddocks for sheep awaiting shearing or some other process. Inevitably these houses, sheds & holding paddocks were fenced with a "shelter-belt" of Cupressus Macrocapa (Monterey Cyprus to you Northern Hemisphere blokes)
Fast-forward seventy-odd years and tens of thousands of Kiwis live in "lifestyle block" houses on two or three acre sections carved out from farmhouses left empty by the rural depopulation (from mechanisation) of the 60s & 70s. Many of those small-holdings are bordered by the original Macrocapa hedge, often three trees deep and offering a sprawling & waterproof canopy up against a fenceline usually only 50 metres or so from the house - an irresistible dumping ground for old tractors, piles of firewood seasoning, dead farm machinery, "spare parts" cars - you name it.
Thus there is a time-honoured tradition, in rural New Zealand, of parking something that you don't want cluttering the section, the shed or the driveway; but which "might be useful someday" and which is, anyway "too good to throw out" . . . "under the Macs"
The lower branches also provide a convenient anchor for chain winches, carcass-lifiting swingletrees, front-end-loaders with leaking hydraulics . . . home-made engine-block lifting devices and the like.
So when one comes home with a new CS 6/1 which needs to be lifted off one trailer and kept up in the air for a few weeks before being dropped onto another trailer to be towed to its destination on a concrete pad somewhere else . . . "Under the Macs" is the obvious repository
I paid $500 for this one. It has, allegedly, "Had the valves and rings done five years ago and never subsequently used . . . " time will tell. I suspect if I just buy an Indian pump/line/injector assembly and splash a bit of diesel around it might be a good runner.
I guess we'll see