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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Bay of Plenty animal trainer uses sheep and horses to help anxious kids

Sally Round
RNZ·
14 Dec, 2025 08:57 PM5 mins to read

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A "grin" for the camera from Minstrel, bred and raised by Bex Tasker. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round

A "grin" for the camera from Minstrel, bred and raised by Bex Tasker. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round

By Sally Round of RNZ

Ordinary farm animals can do extraordinary things under the care and guidance of former drug dog handler Bex Tasker.

In a few rolling paddocks overlooking Matakana Island in the Bay of Plenty, her young human trainees are also building up their skills working with the sheep, chickens, rabbits and horses.

Tasker trained as a vet nurse and worked with guide dogs before working for Customs, handling dogs to sniff out drugs.

Five years ago, she started working with young people through her animal training business, Positively Together.

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She not only trains the animals, including Kaimanawa horses from the wild, but she also teaches 7- to 16-year-olds how to coax animals to build on their natural behaviour, using positive reinforcement methods.

“Force-free training is about making behaviour change, but it’s about doing it in a way that the animal’s on board with that and the animal is having as much fun as we are, whereas I think traditional animal training is about making the animals do things because it’s convenient for humans,” she told RNZ’s Country Life.

She takes the older trainees with her to demonstrate the animals’ skills at fairs and A&P shows.

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“They get nerdy like I do, about the training, and some of them just love cuddling the animals.”

When Country Life visited Tasker’s 5.6-hectare property near Aongatete, the treat bags were out, and Pipsqueak, Rupert and Misty were getting ready for a session with “next-gen trainers” Ariela, Hosea and Elena.

Thirteen-year-old Ariela led Pipsqueak, one of the sheep, onto a pedestal where, with the help of a sheepnut or two, he waved his hoof, a trick Ariela has been working on.

“I was just trying to train him to stand on the pedestal, but he kept on nudging me with his foot, and I’m like, I think I can turn this into something.

“It’s more about trying to get him to get out of bad habits of, you know, nudging me, and more wanting him to wave in front of him.”

Timing is everything, she said, as well as a love of animals and confidence.

“And patience for sure.”

Bex with Barnaby, the Valais Blacknose, her "main man". Photo / RNZ, Sally Round
Bex with Barnaby, the Valais Blacknose, her "main man". Photo / RNZ, Sally Round

Her 10-year-old sister Elena said she had learnt a lot about the handling of animals and body language.

“[It’s] definitely taught me to be patient with animals, because sometimes that’s kind of hard because they’re like, pushing you, and you’re like, ‘oh, come on, just stop doing that!’”

Tasker has recently started “Animal Adventures”, a therapeutic programme aimed at building young people’s resilience and meeting the needs of those with anxiety and other mental health issues.

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Radha, Bex's assistant, and trainee Hosea with her horses and sheep Barnaby and Rupert. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round
Radha, Bex's assistant, and trainee Hosea with her horses and sheep Barnaby and Rupert. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round

“There’s definitely a need for our neurodiverse kids and all sorts of other sorts of medical complexities and challenges.”

Tasker takes some of her animals to shows to demonstrate their skills, including her magnificent Valais Black Nose sheep Barnaby, whom she described as her “main man”.

With his horns and long ringlets, he is an unusual sight, fetching, jumping and spinning for the crowds.

“He’s quite surprisingly athletic for how heavy set he is.”

She also incorporates card tricks and a chicken football game into her shows, building on the animals’ natural behaviour, like pecking, and the ability to discriminate certain colours.

Bex Tasker takes her animal show to local events such as A&P shows, markets, schools, fairs and community events. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round
Bex Tasker takes her animal show to local events such as A&P shows, markets, schools, fairs and community events. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round

“It’s the magic of training, it’s the magic of animals.

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“While it all seems very silly and cute and fun, there is, for me, there’s a much deeper, deeper message, deeper meaning.

“I’m really passionate about the pre-teens and the teenage group in particular, and really role-modelling and showing the importance of respecting body autonomy, of looking for consent when we’re interacting with other beings, whether those are sheep or chickens or humans.”

Radha Foulds, one of the coaches, cradles a newborn lamb, with Awhi on guard. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round
Radha Foulds, one of the coaches, cradles a newborn lamb, with Awhi on guard. Photo / RNZ, Sally Round

What about those who say that making animals perform is not natural and unfair to the animals?

“My response is that we ask the animal, you know, and my animals tell me that they love it more than anything.

“My horses [...] come literally galloping from the other end of the paddock, neighing when they see me come to the gate because they’re so keen to train.

“So rather than putting human ideology and human ideas onto our animals, this is a, you know, a good example of where we need to ask the animal.

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“Yes, they’re performing, but they’re also living 99.9% of the time in a paddock with, you know, friends, so they’re not living an unnatural lifestyle, and then, every now and then, I pull them out and take them out and do things, and they’re always happy to perform.”

Tasker also takes her animals to rest homes where she says older people find joy in cuddling newborn lambs, unlocking memories of their earlier life.

She would eventually like to build a charitable arm for her business, enabling more of the therapy work and offering scholarship spots to young people.

- RNZ

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