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Home / The Country

'He's one of a kind' Megan Whitehead's dad supports her shearing record bid

By Mary-Jo Tohill
Otago Daily Times·
25 Nov, 2020 10:15 PM4 mins to read

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Quentin Whitehead is right behind his daughter Megan's women's strong wool lamb shearing record bid. Photo / Supplied/Sandy Eggleston

Quentin Whitehead is right behind his daughter Megan's women's strong wool lamb shearing record bid. Photo / Supplied/Sandy Eggleston

They say behind every good man there's a good woman, but in this case behind every good woman there's a hard-working dad.

Gore farmer Quentin Whitehead is pulling out all the stops for his daughter, Megan Whitehead, to break the women's strong wool lamb shearing record in nine hours in Southland on January 14.

The lambs are bred, the shearer is in training, and Team Whitehead is hoping the stars align for her to smash the record that Waikato shearer Emily Welch set in 2007, when she shore 648 lambs.

Whitehead (24) put herself into contention when she participated as the youngest member of a four-women team in a four-stand strong wool lamb shearing record earlier this year.

The team shore 2066 lambs in nine hours, with Whitehead shearing her way through 608 lambs that day, 100 lambs ahead of her nearest rival.

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In preparation for that record, she shore 601 lambs in eight hours, making her the first woman to have ever done two lots of 600 tallies.

The Whiteheads have been involved in breeding the lambs for the record attempt themselves by crossing a Snowline ram over Wairere Romney ewes to get the right type of lamb required to break the record.

Tokanui shearer Megan Whitehead takes the belly wool off her lamb during the Riversdale Speed Shears competition on Saturday. Photo / Sandy Eggleston
Tokanui shearer Megan Whitehead takes the belly wool off her lamb during the Riversdale Speed Shears competition on Saturday. Photo / Sandy Eggleston

"We could have used a Perendale or Cheviot but they tend to be more feisty and less likely to settle, and for world records a more co-operative sheep was desirable," Mr Whitehead said.

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It was a balancing act to get that "sweet spot" between the lamb having .9 kg of wool and 90% with top knots to qualify under the World Sheep Shearing Society rules, but also not to be too big to make the record attempt achievable.

"I want her to have the best opportunity possible and take as many of the variables out of it.

"There's so many things you can't control. So many things can go wrong."

A shearer himself from the 1980s until the early 2000s before he went farming, he said he didn't officially teach his daughter to shear. She got involved about four years ago, when she was working as a shepherd.

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"A shearer didn't turn up, so she jumped in and shore 80 and got the bug.

"I've said to her if you're going to be a shearer you need to be the best.

"She's like me but maybe a bit more passive, but she is very competitive, and very strong-minded. It's a must in a shearer.

"She knows what she wants."

Gore farmer Quentin Whitehead. Photo / Supplied
Gore farmer Quentin Whitehead. Photo / Supplied

The aim was for Miss Whitehead to do a lamb every 46 seconds, from catch, shear to dispatch; that's seven seconds faster than her previous attempt.

"In any endurance sport like this where you're racing against the clock and not a human, it's very hard on your mind," he said.

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"The true measure is whether you can get out of that dark place. It's the mark of an elite athlete that you can get out of it."

Whitehead's mother, Tina McColl, was also a shearer. She had surpassed her mum's record of 504 lambs in a day.

"Dad's done 700 so I want to beat him," Whitehead said.

She paid tribute to the number of sleepless nights her father was having in organising the event for her.

"He is one of a kind. He's got his own farm, let alone running something like this.

He's always wanted to be the best at everything, from AI technician, to dog triallist. He had the biggest dipping run. He's always been competitive.

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"He believes in me, but I believe in myself, too."

This year they'd improved her pattern, cutting out two blows and speeding up the cutter changes.

"She's more experienced now. She'd not been shearing too long when she did the competition," Mr Whitehead said.

Miss Whitehead is in Hawke's Bay shearing ewes and lambs and will carry on to the King Country.

She plans to be back in Southland early next year to prepare for the event, to be held at Croydon Bush.

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