386 ewes, 25 tonnes of sheep, 1.35 tonnes of wool
Farmer-turned shearer Amy Silcock smashed a World record near Pahiatua today, but the elation was still dimmed by the
couple that got way.
Shearing under the watch of four World Sheep Shearing Record Society judges, the 37-year-old claimed the women’s solo
eight-hours strongwool ewe-shearing record with a tally of 386 at Ross Na Clonagh Farm, just off the Pahiatua track and
where the temperature in the four-stand woolshed soared to about 32deg late in the afternoon.
But it could have been 388, the judges rejecting two of those shorn in the last of the four two-hour runs during the
record bid which started at 7am and, with breaks for morning and afternoon tea and lunch, saw the previous record of 370
passed half-an-hour before the last of the sheep was popped-through the porthole just after 5pm.
Keeping just ahead of the required pace from the start, she caught, sheared and dispatched close to 25 tonnes of sheep
and added about 1.35 tonnes of wool to the national fleece, the first three runs without blemish. With 95 and 97 in the
two runs before lunch and a gut-busting 101 in the first two hours after what was a light graze, she still got 93 in the
last two hours, but said, towel across the shoulders, stubbie in hand but strung-out on the grass outside: “I’m
disappointed I lost two in the last run. I’m glad I got that third run (the 101), but it buggered me. I’ve got nothing
left.”
Previous holder and Kent farmer Marie Prebble had runs of 94, 93, 93, and 90 when she established the record in the UK
in August 2022.
Now the holder of two-records – having first appeared on the records scene in a women’s four-stand lambshearing tally –
Silcock did have enough in her afterwards to say she’s got more to come.
“I’d like to do a two-stand,” she said. “Just got to find the right person and the right sheep.”
There had been a scare with rain and a drop in temperature on Saturday, when a shear of 10 of the flock produced an
average 3.478kg a ewe, safely above the minimum requirement of 3kg.
It proved ideal on the day, but how long she will be the holder depends on the first challenge, on Wednesday, when the
record will be tackled by well-performed competition shearer Catherine Mullooly at Nukuhakari Station, 780 Te Marama
Road, Waikawau, on the North Taranaki coast west of Te Kuiti.
Also at Ross Na Clonagh was Scottish shearer Una Cameron, who gave Silcock her first shearing job in the UK, and who is
also planning a ewes record in the UK in August – “but not sure which one.”
Judging panel convener Mike Henderson, a New Zealander based in West Australia for many years and living at Dongara,
north of Perth, described Silcock’s achievement as “a gutsy effort”, with a good support crew, including farmers Matt
and Sarah Walker.
The summer is now heading for a reshaping of all four women’s solo strongwool records, with both the eight-hours and
nine-hours lambshearing records having been smashed before Christmas, and an attack on the nine-hours ewes record
scheduled for February.