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With a history steeped in agriculture it is natural that New Zealands
farmers, shepherds and shearers have become known throughout the world for
their skill and toughness. Many have travelled, to teach and work in
foreign countries, but few have been invited to Buckingham Palace,
appeared on late night American television or been honoured by the leader
of the Soviet Union. Only one: Godfrey Bowen.
Walter Godfrey Bowen was born in Hastings, New Zealand, in 1922. He was named after his father, a sheep farmer of Craggy Range, Havelock North. Godfrey attended Havelock North Primary School from 1927 to 1932 and had aspirations to one day becoming a lawyer. However his family moved to Te Puke in the Bay of Plenty and his father decreed (due to the stresses of the Depression years) that he couldn't go to secondary school and had to milk cows instead. With his brothers Eion, Ivan and Ken, he began working as a shearer at the age of 16. All the Bowen boys became accomplished shearers. They all had an edge, especially Ivan and Godfrey. These two had a massive edge, one over the rest of the worlds shearers, a talent that appeared almost God-given. From the outset Godfrey displayed an incredibly natural apitutude for shearing, and over the course of his career was to transform shearing techniques. In 1938 during his first season, as a 16-year-old, his best days tally was 204 sheep. At that time the top shearers in the country could not manage more than 300. By the time he was 19, Bowen's personal best would be 322, an enormous tally for those days considering the equipment used and the standard of the sheep. When World War II broke out, Bowen along with most young New Zealand men, enlisted to serve his country overseas. New Zealand served a dual role during the war: supplying men to fight in the Pacific, Europe and North Africa, and supplying food and raw materials for the allies. "Manpower", the wartime government body established to direct the labour force, decided the best way Bowen could aid the defence against Nazism was through full time sheep shearing. In 1945, however, he was called up, and trained with a Commando unit, but the war ended before he left New Zealand.
The Bowen Technique The strain on sheep shearers is unbelievable. Considerable strength and stamina is needed at all times, and shearers are constantly working in an awkward, bent position. They are only able to straighten their back after each sheep is shorn. The shearing technique used in the 1940s had been evolving since 1888, when the first shearing machines were introduced into New Zealand. Blade shearing required the shearer to use short movements for the scissor-like cuts, a technique that continued with machine shearing. In 1905, however, Australian shearer Jim Powers started using long strokes to clip the wool. He described it as "going right from the breezer to the sneezer", and with this new style, managed to shear an unprecedented 300 merinos in eight hours. The next major breakthrough happened around 1912. Harry Hawkins of Wairoa further added to the speed with which a sheep could be shorn by using downward strokes from the brisket to the groin. These techniques were further advanced over the next few years, mainly by New Zealanders. Sheep numbers were growing and with this came the need for increased daily tallies. Bowen was by nature an excellent
observer and he learnt
quickly. His aim was to perfect a
continuous shearing action combined with the lowest possible energy
output. He adopted the techniques of various shearers,
incorporating all the positives he saw. For example, he once saw a shearer
with a withered arm who allowed the sheep to roll into position because he
didnt have the strength to turn them himself. From this Bowen
developed a new
technique for holding the sheep. |
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Bowen would test these new techniques working with his brother Ivan.
One would try the new method, the other would work alongside using the
traditional way as a comparison. |
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Ivan (centre) and Godfrey (right), winner
and runner-up respectively in the first Golden Shears open final, meet
Prince Philip during the Shears' Royal Command Performance in Lower Hutt
1965 Copyright The Dominion, Wellington |
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Godfrey
Bowen is presented with cowboy hat by
Oregon farmers c. 1967 |
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| Expo and
Agrodome Bowen was invited to produce the New Zealand outdoor exhibit at the 1970 World Expo in Osaka, Japan. In the previous 15 years he had shown that not only was he a shearer and educator of extraordinary ability, but he was also a brilliant public speaker and cultural ambassador for New Zealand. His blend of humour and philosophy, his good-natured ruggedness, his intelligence and his enthusiasm won him friends all over the world. He was a guest on the British talk show Parkinson and invited to appear on the famous Tonight Show with Johnny Carson in the United States. With the edge cheekiness typical of a Kiwi, he tried to encourage Carson to have a go at shearing. He was also invited to Afghanistan and asked to return to India and the Soviet Union. The World Expo, with shearing demonstrations, exhibitions of different breeds and a display of trained sheep was a hit and earned Bowen New Zealand's tourism award, the Newman Award. Taking the theme from the World Expo, Bowen opened Agrodome in 1971. On an 80 ha block 10km from Rotorua he and local farmer George Harford, established this theme park dedicated to the New Zealand farm. The Agrodome has won many tourism awards over the years and a smaller operation has travelled to festivals and shows in the United States and Britain. Harford was a sheep and beef farmer from Reporoa. The Agrodome combined his farming talents with Bowens shearing ability and both saw the potential of displaying Kiwi rural culture in a show setting. Today the Agrodome is run by both the founders sons, Warren Harford and Paul Bowen. They have also opened a bigger version in Japan that hosts one million visitors a year. In 1980 fire completely destroyed the Agrodome building.
Showing style in the face of adversity, Ivan Bowen, who was the
Agrodome's main presenter and showman, performed the world famous sheep
show on a nearby hill in front of 100 visitors, while the destroyed building
smouldered in the background. |
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Godfrey Bowen aged 61 before his retirement from the NZ Wool Board 1983 Copyright The Dominion, Wellington |
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| Science, Art Godfrey Bowen wrote several books about shearing, and New Zealand farming in general. He was a renowned public speaker, and a lay preacher to all denominations. He kept a very busy schedule of appointments both nationally and internationally. Ever the sportsman, he mastered awn bowls and won two Wellington Provincial Championships (1986 and 1987). Godfrey Bowen died in 1994 at the age of 72, and his legacy is long and lasting. The Bowen family's contribution to the world of shearing is unparalled and the family-owned Agrodome is a permanent fixture on the tourist map. At 84, brother Ivan is the embodiment of rural New Zealand toughness. He can still shear a sheep in around 60 seconds; he still competes in the Golden Shears Veterans' Competition, and keeps fit with a daily routine that includes 100 press-ups. To the present day New Zealand shearers are regarded as the best in the world. Men such as Snow Quinn who dominated the New Zealand and international scene between 1965 and 1972; David Fagan, who won 11 consecutive Golden Shears titles and has 437 open wins to his credit; John Fagan (older brother of David, some say he was the Godfrey Bowen of the 80s), was also world record holder and Golden Shears champion; Darrin Forde, the current world record holder shearing 720 crossbred ewes in nine hours; Dion Morrell, who holds the world record for shearing 505 Merrino ewes in nine hours; Alan MacDonald who holds the current world record for shearing 831 lambs in the same time; Cartwright Terry who with a swift 19 or 20 blows has undressed a lamb in what is believed to be the world's fastest time: 21.08 seconds; Colin King who has been a Golden Shears champion is regarded as the best left handed shearer the world has seen, and Keith Wilson, the legendary shed shearer who, in December 1999, broke the unofficial world record by shearing 871 sheep in one incredible sweat-soaked day. In any given year approximately one third of all British sheep are
shorn by New Zealanders. The shearers get to see the world; the farmers
get the best. This is due to the way shearing is viewed in New Zealand: as
a science and an art. Those who shear competitively approach their sport
as any top athlete does, with fitness, training and commitment. They see
shearing as something to be proud of and to master. The way Bowen saw it. |
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| Sources
Web references: For the Agrodome website: Books: Bowen, Godfrey. (1982) The Ringers Stand, Kerslake Billens and Humphery Ltd, New Zealand Bowen, Godfrey. (1971) New Zealand and its Sheep, National Sheep Centre, Levin, New Zealand Bowen, Godfrey. (1955) Wool Away: the Art and Technique of Shearing, Whitcombe and Tombs Ltd, New Zealand Grayland, Eugene. (1967) Famous New Zealanders, Whitcombe and Tombs Ltd, New Zealand COPYRIGHT NZEDGE.COM
IP HOLDINGS LIMITED 1998-2011. |
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Aitken | Alda | Alley
| Atack | Batten | Bowen |
Britten |
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