fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 07 April 2015 11:38

Young ploughman’s first national contest

Written by 
While it’s Adam Mehrtens’ first National Championships, the plough he’s using has form from way back. While it’s Adam Mehrtens’ first National Championships, the plough he’s using has form from way back.

Twenty year old Adam Mehrtens will the youngest competitor at the 2015 National Ploughing Championship, but the plough he’ll be using has seen action at the highest level.

“It’s won the nationals and I think Bob said he’s even taken it to a world championship,” he told Rural News.

The reference to “Bob” is to his uncle, Bob Mehrtens, several times New Zealand champion with a conventional plough who has also won the nationals and competed on the world stage with a reversible.

Adam says “hanging around” with his uncle at ploughing matches when he was a kid was what got him into ploughing. “I started when I was about 12.”

Last year he set his sights on qualifying for the nationals and this year made it “after quite a few matches” with a win at Waimate.

He says he “hopes to do pretty well” at the nationals at Palmerston but is well aware of the level of competition he’ll face.

Pulling the trusty Kverneland will be a two-wheel drive Fiat 540 with ballasted back wheels and a new coat of paint “especially for the occasion.” When Rural News caught up with him a couple of weeks ago it just needed the seat re-fitting before hooking up to the plough and getting in some practice.

As for the plough, for all its history he says it is a “pretty standard” Kverneland match plough with steel mouldboards. “I’ll probably go to plastic mouldboards eventually; they reckon the dirt doesn’t stick to them like it can to steel.”

Fellow finalist Eric Gin from Oamaru also has plastic mouldboards on his wish list but even after “six or seven” previous appearances at the nationals, he says he’s still trying to master the art with steel. “Once I get up to the next level I’ll probably progress onto plastic.”

Gin qualified at Lincoln and is hoping he can go better than his previous bests at the nationals which was second on grass, also at Lincoln, in 2013, and fifth overall.

“You try to do a better job each time but there are a lot of variables that come in. You always think you’ll get it right next time but then there’s something else: the soil conditions, or you forget to do something. Once you’ve made a mistake there’s no going back. If it’s crooked [the judges] see that.”

It’s the challenge of perfect ploughing despite the variables that makes the sport so appealing, he says. “And I like meeting the other ploughmen and the camaraderie of the people involved.”

Mehrtens echoes Gin’s comments. “You can always do better. There’s always something to learn. It’s never ending really.”

Australian experience

Gin is one of about a dozen New Zealand ploughmen who have honed their skills during a long-running exchange trip to Australia courtesy of the NZ Ploughing Association.

“Every second year we send someone over to Australia and they plough at four or five matches,” explains NZ Ploughing Association executive officer Noel Sheat.

The association pays the airfare then the ploughmen are billeted with fellow enthusiasts across the ditch for ten days to a fortnight, using a tractor and plough supplied locally to compete.

“They’re always harder to beat after they’ve been,” notes Sheat. “They’re just that bit more knowledgeable. It’s the same with the World Championships. Every time you go you come back that little bit more knowledgeable.”

Ploughmen for the exchange are selected from the National Championship line-up. To be eligible they must not have been on the exchange before or finish above fifth.

More like this

Ploughing Champs success

Sean Leslie and Casey Tilson from Middlemarch, with horses Beau and Dough, took out the Rural News Horse Plough award at the Power Farming NZ Ploughing Championships at Horotiu, near Hamilton, on April 13-14.

The Ploughing pulls the crowd

With our own National Fieldays only few weeks away, Rural News took the opportunity to take a trip overseas – as a guest of Enterprise Ireland, which invited 190 guests from 19 countries – to look at Ireland’s own national event, locally known as The Ploughing.

Champs keep ploughing on

Ploughman Ian Woolly (Blenheim) and Malcolm Taylor (Putaruru) will represent NZ at next year’s World Ploughing championships in Ireland.

Ploughing ahead

A much scaled-down New Zealand Ploughing championship will be held near the Canterbury town of Kirwee in mid-July.

Featured

An 'amaizing' season

It's been a bumper season for maize and other supplements in the eastern Bay of Plenty.

Leaders connect to plan continued tree planting

Leading farmers from around New Zealand connected to share environmental stories and inspiration and build relationships at the Dairy Environment Leaders (DEL) national forum in Wellington last month.

Planting natives for the future

Te Awamutu dairy farmers Doug, Penny, Josh and Bayley Storey have planted more than 25,000 native trees on the family farm, adding to a generations-old native forest.

National

Frontline biosecurity 'untouchable'

Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard has reiterated that 'frontline' biosecurity services within Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) will not be cut…

Migrant farmer 'lets the side down'

An appalling case of migrant worker exploitation on a Southland farm isn't acceptable, says Federated Farmers dairy chair Richard McIntyre.

Machinery & Products

New name, new ideas

KGM New Zealand, is part of the London headquartered Inchcape Group, who increased its NZ presence in August 2023 with…

All-terrain fert spreading mode

Effluent specialists the Samson Group have developed a new double unloading system to help optimise uphill and downhill organic fertiliser…

Can-Am showcases range

Based on industry data collected by the Motor Industry Association, Can-Am is the number one side-by-side manufacturer in New Zealand.