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Home / The Country

Flying dog spotted over Bay of Islands

By Peter de Graaf
Reporter·Northern Advocate·
1 Jun, 2020 06:00 PM2 mins to read

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Rascal the dog takes owner Colette Kershaw for a parasailing flight above the Bay of Islands. Photo / Jules De Rosa

Rascal the dog takes owner Colette Kershaw for a parasailing flight above the Bay of Islands. Photo / Jules De Rosa

It's a bird! It's a plane! No, it's ... a dog named Rascal.

Bay of Islands residents who happened to look skywards recentlymay have been surprised to see a west highland terrier fly past at a height of about 300 metres.

The 7-year-old pooch is no stranger to adventure or the limelight — Rascal even features on his own postcards — but this was his first time parasailing.

Rascal has been hanging out on Russell wharf since he was a puppy with owner Colette Kershaw, who also owns Russell Booking and Information Centre.

Rascal the dog takes owner Colette Kershaw for a parasailing flight above the Bay of Islands. Photo / Jules De Rosa
Rascal the dog takes owner Colette Kershaw for a parasailing flight above the Bay of Islands. Photo / Jules De Rosa
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He has become a business mascot and an unofficial harbourmaster, mounting regular patrols of the wharf and greeting incoming vessels (especially if he gets a whiff of something tasty on board).

His sea legs have been tested on the tall ship R Tucker Thompson and he once attempted to stow away on Fullers' Cream Trip around the Bay.

However, until now he'd never been parasailing.

''He loved it,'' Kershaw said.

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''He was looking around, he knows his environment so I think he enjoyed seeing it from a higher perspective. He's a very inquisitive, nosey dog.''

Colette Kershaw and Rascal, possibly the best-known dog in the Bay of Islands, after their parasailing flight. Daniel Gordon
Colette Kershaw and Rascal, possibly the best-known dog in the Bay of Islands, after their parasailing flight. Daniel Gordon

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Bay of Islands Parasail co-owner Jules De Rosa said she offered the pair a flight to celebrate the end of Covid-19 isolation and to support another Bay of Islands business.
Rascal was clipped into a dog harness for the 10-minute flight.

''He was super-cool. His tail was wagging. Colette was more nervous than he was,'' De Rosa said.

Rascal was not the company's first canine client — two lapdogs went flying a few years ago — but she didn't know of any other parasailing operations in the world which offered dog flights.

Their human customers covered the entire age range with the oldest so far a 102-year-old Paihia woman.

Colette Kershaw and Rascal after their flight with Bay of Islands Parasail. Photo / Jules De Rosa
Colette Kershaw and Rascal after their flight with Bay of Islands Parasail. Photo / Jules De Rosa

Since her business reopened after the lockdown, Kershaw said she had been posting fun stuff on local Facebook pages, much of it focused on Rascal.

''I wanted to introduce a feel-good factor. It's been a shocking time for a lot of people, now it's time to get out of the hole and make people smile.''

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