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Home / The Country

Shearing: First open win for Hawke’s Bay woolhandler Jasmin Tipoki at Wairarapa Spring Shears

Doug Laing
By Doug Laing
Multimedia Journalist·The Country·
30 Oct, 2023 02:28 AM6 mins to read

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Napier woolhandler Jasmin Tipoki, seen here at the Golden Shears in Masterton in March. Photo / Pete Nikolaison

Napier woolhandler Jasmin Tipoki, seen here at the Golden Shears in Masterton in March. Photo / Pete Nikolaison

Napier woolhandler Jasmin Tipoki still finds it difficult to believe she’s cracked an open competition win.

But she has - claiming the red ribbon on Saturday, at what might have been called her home competition, the Wairarapa A and P Show at Clareville, Carterton.

Tipoki, originally from Martinborough, had one word to sum up her achievement.

“Wow!”

She edged out some pretty stiff competition, with Keryn Herbert, of Te Kuiti finishing as runner-up and Ngaio Hanson of Eketahuna coming in third.

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Herbert is the 2010 world teams title winner, six-times Shearing Sports New Zealand’s No. 1-ranked open woolhandler and the 2023 World Championships Cook Islands representative, while Hanson is a 2023 World Championships New Zealand representative.

Despite Tipoki finishing fourth in the New Zealand World Championships team selection series final, the Golden Shears open final and the North Island woolhandling circuit final last summer – her first season in the open class – the now 38-year-old mum-of-six was still not rating herself a chance of toppling the best.

“I had a mean run - my heat was my best performance and it set me up feeling I could make the top three for that final,” she said.

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“I felt good after my final, too, but still - competing against Keryn and Ngaio I didn’t think I’d done enough to beat them.”

Tipoki wasn’t the only one in the trio without an open final title to her name – Hanson, despite being among the best, was also winless in the grade.

Tipoki said the win gave her new hope, after following behind some impressive names in the sport.

In 2015, she was fifth in the national senior woolhandling rankings, though without recording a win.

Those above her included Hanatia Tipene, an eventual New Zealand Shears open champion and national team member, dual World Champion Joel Henare, who has since won about 130 open finals, and 2019 World Teams Champion Pagan Rimene, who’s won more than 30.

In 2007, a move to Australia meant Tipoki stopped competing for 12 years.

“I started back in 2019 at the Hawke’s Bay show, in the senior grade, but I sometimes wonder where I would have been if I had stayed and continued competing.”

She’d departed with the best results being Taumarunui and Taranaki junior wins late in the 2004-2005 season, and a third placing in the New Zealand Shears junior finals, before being upgraded to senior where she regularly made second-shear finals and was third again at the New Zealand Shears.

Back in New Zealand, Tipoki started competing again, after attending shows with her partner and 2016-2017 No. 1-ranked senior shearer Paraki Puna.

Despite not winning a single final, she was the No. 1-ranked senior woolhandler in 2019-2020, and finally hit winning form in 2020-2021 with six wins in seven senior finals before upgrading to open.

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With new confidence, Tipoki is dreaming big, with the 2026 World Championships in Masterton “definitely on the goals list.”

“I didn’t think I would make it to the last World’s (selection) final. Now I’ve done that, I know where I need to improve to make that team.

“I definitely want to represent New Zealand one day.”

Tipoki plans to compete next at the Manawatū show in Feilding this Saturday, but work – an occasional thing with family operation Puna Shearing while looking after her “babies” – will increase soon and determine which other competitions she gets to through to mid-February.

Meanwhile, Puna continued his pursuit of a first open shearing title by finishing third in Saturday’s final - in which Hemi Braddick, of Eketahuna, scored his third win.

Baddick had previously waited almost 10 years for his first open title, which he secured at Gisborne last year.

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Shearing the 15 hoggets in 13min 29sec, 32-year-old Braddick scored both the best time and quality points to beat runner-up, Masterton shearer and 2023 New Zealand UK tour team member David Gordon by almost 2.2pts.

Woodville shearer Laura Bradley, who was No. 1-ranked nationally as a junior in 2014-2015 and as an intermediate two years later, scored her first senior shearing win, being first to finish the 8-sheep final and claiming a 1pt margin over runner-up Jack Hutchinson, a recent arrival from England.

Michael Buick, a Rathkeale College pupil from Pongaroa and son of open shearer and multiple New Zealand teams member David Buick, won the intermediate final.

Kaivah Cooper, of Napier, continued winning form in the junior grade, and Ged Billing, also a Rathkeale pupil, won the novice event.

In the woolhandling, Flaxmere brother-and-sister Naki and Nohokainga Maraki were first and second respectively in the senior final.

Bradley’s sister, 2023 Golden Shears novice woolhandling champion Eleri Bradley, won the junior woolhandling final, while novice woolhandling honours went to Sophie Humphrey, of Masterton.

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There were 67 entries across the nine grades, with 38 shearers, including 15 in the open class; and 29 woolhandlers, including 13 in the open class.

Organisers are looking for even more in the revival of the Manawatū Show competition next Saturday and the Central Hawke’s Bay A and B Show’s championships on November 11.

Results from the Wairarapa Spring Shears at the Wairarapa A and P Show at Clareville, Carterton, on Saturday, October 28, 2023

Shearing:

Open final (15 sheep): Hemi Braddick (Eketahuna) 13min 29sec, 47.65pts, 1; David Gordon (Masterton) 13min 42sec, 49.8333pts, 2; Paraki Puna (Napier) 14min 4sec, 51.6pts, 3; Tama Niania (Gisborne) 14min 10sec, 56.4333pts, 4.

Senior final (8 sheep): Laura Bradley (Woodville) 9min 44sec, 39.95pts, 1; Jack Hutchinson (England) 10min 24sec, 40.95pts, 2; Kapua Brown (Taumarunui) 10min 9sec, 42.075pts, 3; Bruce Grace (Wairoa) 10min 17sec, 43.475pts, 4.

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Intermediate final (5 sheep): Michael Buick (Pongaroa) 9min 1sec, 36.05pts, 1; Cheyden Winiana (Nuhaka) 7min 19sec, 39.15pts, 2; Jake Goldsbury (Maraetotara) 6min 49sec, 39.45pts, 3; Tim Dickson (-) 7min 48sec, 45.4pts, 4.

Junior final (4 sheep): Kaivah Cooper (Napier) 8min 9sec, 34.45pts, 1; Kingston Renata (-) 8min 23sec, 40.9pts, 2; Marshall Buckman (Apiti) 9min 46sec, 45.55pts, 3; Maureen Chaffey (Pongaroa) 11min 8sec, 49.4pts, 4.

Novice (1 sheep): Ged Billing (Masterton) 4min 22sec, 29.1pts, 1; Candon Bolton (-) 4min 57sec, 32.85pts, 2; Waiari Puna (Napier) 3min 19sec, 34.95pts, 3; George Peacock (Dannevirke) 3min 20sec, 36pts, 4.

Woolhandling:

Open final: Jasmin Tipoki (Martinborough/Napier) 109.656pts, 1; Keryn Herbert (Te Kuiti) 114.888pts, 2; Ngaio Hanson (Eketahuna) 119.676pts, 3.

Senior final: Whakapunake (Naki) Maraki (Flaxmere) 97.124pts, 1; Nohokainga Maraki (Flaxmere) 104.212pts, 2; Angeline Colquhoun (Masterton) 125.050pts, 3.

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Junior final: Eleri Bradley (Woodville) 65.082pts, 1; Makayla Neil (Kawhia) 70.194pts, 2; Waiari Puna (Napier) 77.188pts, 3.

Novice: Sophie Humphrey (Masterton) 75.662pts, 1; Gemma Buick (Pongaroa) 90.512pts, 2; Piata Braddick (Eketahuna) 96pts, 3.

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