fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 20 January 2012 09:20

Olympic shearing goes viral

Written by 

The media response to sheep shearing's potential as a Commonwealth Games demonstration sport, if not the Olympics, has gone international.

"Shearing as a demonstration sport has gone viral," says Jeanette Maxwell, Federated Farmers Meat & Fibre chairperson, with the Australian, UK and US media picking it up.

"I've had interviews with BBC regional stations but am being interviewed by Skype for BBC One.

"I've also checked Google News and shearing sport has generated at least 262 news items. From ESPN and a Washington Post blog to Britain's Daily Telegraph, you can say it has grabbed imaginations the world over.

"Some of it may drip with sarcasm but it's giving us the chance to tell people overseas that sheep don't die for their wool. Unbelievable as it may sound to Kiwi ears, some people overseas believe wool is like fur.

"While wool is natural, renewable and completely sustainable, it needs more and perhaps sport provides that magic.

"Our shearing athletes, men and woman alike, are in peak physical condition. When people wear New Zealand wool it has come from the work of people like of Ivan Scott and Kerri-Jo Te Huia.

"We can also add Stacey Te Huia and Sam Welch. Yesterday, they broke a 16-year world record for two-stand nine-hour ewe-shearing.

"I'm under no illusion that this will take time but given the big eight sheep counties are China, Australia, India, Iran, Sudan, New Zealand, Nigeria and the United Kingdom, shearing is more global than many people think," Maxwell says.

More like this

She's shear class!

The rise and rise of top-class female shearers is a growing phenomenon in NZ – especially during recent times.

NZ shearers welcome in the UK

Much like New Zealand contractors who need nothern hemisphere operators to help with the grass, maize and cereal harvests, the United Kingdom is in need of those with prowess on the handpiece to help take the fleeces off that country's 15 million sheep.

'Shearing' NZ's knowledge

Four Mongolian sheep herders have returned to their homeland with new knowledge and skills, honed in NZ, that have the potential to change their lives and reshape their home country's shearing scene.

'Shearing' NZ's knowledge

Four Mongolian sheep herders have returned to their homeland with new knowledge and skills, honed in NZ, that have the potential to change their lives and reshape their home country's shearing scene.

Shear grit at record attempt

Woodville shearer Sacha Bond is training hard for an attempt to break the women’s strong wool lamb shearing world record in Southland next year.

Featured

Feds make case for rural bank lending probe

Bankers have been making record profits in the last few years, but those aren’t the only records they’ve been breaking, says Federated Farmers vice president Richard McIntyre.

National

Fonterra unveils divestment plan

Fonterra is exploring full or partial divestment options for its global Consumer business, as well as its integrated businesses Fonterra…

Fonterra appoints new CFO

Fonterra has appointed a new chief financial officer, seven months after its last CFO’s shock resignation.

Machinery & Products

GPS in control

In a move that will make harvesting operations easier, particularly in odd-shaped paddocks, Kuhn has announced that GPS section control…