January 29, 2013
Hawke’s Bay trio count-down to shearing record
Former World Champion and World record-breaking shearer Cam Ferguson is confident he’ll get his name back into the
record books on Thursday (January 31) when he and two workmates tackle a woolshed tally record which has gone
unchallenged for 14 years.
Waipawa shearer Ferguson will team with Dannevirke guns Adam Brausch and Ringakaha Paewai in pursuit of the World
three-stand, eight-hours lambshearing record, targeting a tally of 1784 shorn by King Country shearers Digger Balme,
Roger Neil and Dean Ball in 1999.
Ferguson, who won the World title in Wales in 2010 and six months later set a solo record of 742 lambs in eight hours,
which stood for a year, believes Brausch and Paewai are also capable of 700 each in a day in the record attempt which
will take place at Moa Stone Farm, east of Ormondville.
The three shared duties crutching the lambs at the weekend, although Brausch took a break on Saturday to compete at the
Taihape A and P Show, where he reached the Open final and finished third.
With ideal conditions forecast for the week, more than 2500 of farmer Dave Chadwick’s lambs have been culled, the first
to be shorn before a panel of World Sheep Shearing Records Society judges on Wednesday afternoon, when they must average
at least 0.9kg of wool per lamb.
The record the following day, overseen by a panel of at least five headed by Australian judge Peter Artridge, is
expected to start at 7am and end at 5pm, with four two-hour runs, two-half-hour ‘smoko’ breaks, and an hour off for
lunch.
In the 1999 record, near Bennydale, in King Country, the pace was set by Balme who finished with 621, while Neil shore
600 and Ball 563. Balme opened the day with 154 in each of the runs before lunch and upped the pace in the afternoon for
separate run tallies of 157 and 156.
Thursday’s challenge will be the first record attempt in Southern Hawke’s Bay since an eight-stand tally of 3316 in nine
hours was shorn at Mangaorapa, near Porangahau, in December 1970.
Fees of almost $4000 have been paid to the records society, and a team of about 40 helpers is expected. Sponsors include
Cavalier Wool Sccours, Farmlands Co-op, Elders Primary Wool, FMG, Waipukurau Hotel, Porangahau’s Duke of Edinburgh
Hotel, and Merrylees Hotel in Dannevirke, the gang’s current employer, Darrin Paewai, and fellow contractors Paewai
Mullins, of Dannevirke, and Shear Expertise, of Masterton.
It will be the first of three shearing record attempts within three weeks. On February 5 Golden Shears champion John
Kirkpatrick and three others will target a four-stand record in Southland, and on February 12 King Country shear Stacey
Te Huia will tackle the ultimate tally, the nine-hour ewes record of 721 shorn by Hawke's Bay shearer Rodney Sutton in
2007.
ENDS