Wool Pressing

Competing together for the first time were 61-year-old John Hicks and 29-year-old schoolteacher-son Jono Hicks, while the opposition was Christine Wolland, 38, and son Tyrone Oliver a second year pupil at Makoura College in Masterton who turns 15 next week.

Among the reasons neither team had competed together before was that neither veteran shearer John Hicks nor lanky team Tyrone Oliver had competed in the sport before, apart from John Hicks’ one-show sortie in a junior shearing competition many years ago.

“I shook so much I just never went back,” he said, and he only competed today because Jono’s usual Golden Shears teammate, brother Cam, had had to return to Australia for shearing.

John Hicks has been in the shearing industry more than 35 years, and is still shearing fulltime, with a small run of his own or otherwise for Tipu Shearing, of Huntly. He sewars by it and said: “It put Jono through university.”

Tyrone Oliver might have given it a go last year but his mum, who won the Golden Shears women’s title in 2013, had to make a hard call.

“He was naughty, so I wouldn’t let him,” she said, mopping the sweat from her brow after finally realising what had been her idea and dream in the first place.

She’s been in the industry about 20 years, and works for Eketahuna contractors Steve and Ngaio Hanson, while her son has been pressing during the school holidays.

Both would have a tough task ahead, also in the field being defending six-times champions and further family team, brothers Jeremy and Vinnie Goodger, of Masterton..    

From Doug Laing, media officer, Shearing Sports New Zealand.

For further information: Doug Laing, media officer, Shearing Sports New Zealand, ph 0274-690644. Shearing Sports New Zealand on facebook or Pete Nikolaison, Golden Shears Media Group, goldenshears@pete.co.nz or phone 0064-21-488-137 or 0064-27-5788-137.

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