“I’m interested in the dairy aspect, but also I’m beginning to like the dry stock, but beef more than the sheep.”
In a shed, the apprentices are killing sheep and preparing them for dog tucker, as practice for getting the cuts right for human consumption.
It is just their third time doing this, but apprentice scheme manager Gary Brady said they were already getting a handle on something they were likely to do a lot as junior shepherds.
“They’ll get a shed full of sheep, and they’re told that’s your job for the day, and they’re dog tuckers, so it’s important they learn these basics.”
Brady said once they fully knew what they were doing, it should take about 30 minutes per sheep.
Alex Iremonger, 18, from Whakatāne, worked quickly through his first sheep.
Sixteen-year-old Tori Cheetham has just moved out of home to join this year's apprentice intake. Photo / Pāmu
“We’ve just been doing some dog tuckers, so some not-as-well-off sheep - we captive bolt them, pull them out, cut the throat and then proceed to break them down from the shins to brisket.
“Then we take the skin off, open them up - that’s basically the finished product.”
Iremonger said he did not have much of a farming background, apart from working for a few months on a dairy farm.
But now that he had chosen it as his career, he wanted to one day be a farm manager, and he said he had learnt plenty in his first few weeks as an apprentice.
Alex Iremonger says he doesn't come from a farming background, but wants a career in the industry. Photo / Pāmu
“We’ve learnt to crutch, do dog tuckers, muttons, drench, give animals shots, just learned animal stockmanship, how to treat animals in the yards, how to move and shift animals.
“Also, we’re just learning a lot of people skills, how to budget, how to finance, how to deal with other people.”
The apprentices’ efforts impressed Brady.
“Ewes are a little bit tough, but they’re really good to learn on.
“If you can get the pattern and get everything tidy on these, then the house meats come out really good.