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ROUGH RIDERS FOR SYDNEY SHOW

Australian’s Quest NEW ZEALAND TEAM FROM GISBORNE To select a team of rough-riders, broncho-busters and cow-punchers capable of competing witli the wildest from the Wild West of North America Mr. T. B. MacFarlane, councillor of the Royal Agricultural Society of New South Wales, arrived at Wellington by the Awatea from Sydney yesterday. He said that he had come to choose a team to represent New Zealand at the Sydney Sesquicentennial Royal Show from April 9 to April 23. It appears that the East Coast produces the roughest riders in New Zealand, for Mr. MacFarlane has selected Gisborne as the most likely huntingground. He flew to Gisborne yesterday afternoon, and will return to Australia via Auckland. Mr. MacFarlane said that he would choose four horsemen, if be could find any good enough to compete with the best from Australia, Canada and tlje United States. They would have to be able to sit an unbroken horse for ten seconds from the moment it started to buck. They must also be adepts at bull-dogging, a pastime in which two riders gallop up to a steer and one leaps off, fastens on 'it by the horns and throws it, much as a wrestler throws his opponent from a headlock. They need only take a fall in two minutes, but the feat has been achieved in 5J seconds.

’ Another contest that will take place at the show will be camp-drafting. There is to be an inter-State contest between teams comprising four men and four women. This will consist of riding into a mob of cattle and cutting out certain specified bullocks. Asked what part the women played, Mr. MacFarlane said they were often infinitely, better than the men.

He stated that the American and Canadian cowboys were already staying at his station, Merriwa, -on the Upper Hunter River, where they were practising. Asked if this was not somewhat detrimental to his stock, he said not. Most of them were themselves ranchers in America and in their spare time, for the sake of the sport, followed up the rodeos in various parts of the country. 1 Mr. MacFarlane said that although he had lived 31 in Australia, he was a New Zealander by birth, his home town being Kurow.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19380322.2.138

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 150, 22 March 1938, Page 11

Word Count
378

ROUGH RIDERS FOR SYDNEY SHOW Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 150, 22 March 1938, Page 11

ROUGH RIDERS FOR SYDNEY SHOW Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 150, 22 March 1938, Page 11

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