CHB Mail

Hawke’s Bay triumphs at dog trials

Big start for our trialists in national champs

- Doug Laing

Hawke’s Bay’s sheep dog trialists had a big start to the national championsh­ips series with wins in two of the four classes at the South Island championsh­ips which ended on Friday.

The wins went to former World Championsh­ips competitor, multiple island and national titles winner, A Dogs Show TV series veteran, Weber club member and Oringi farmer Bernard Arends, 67, and first-time winner Sam Magee, 22, a Makotuku shepherd thought to be the second-youngest winner in the history of the island and national championsh­ips, dating back to 1911.

Both are from the Wairarapa and SHB centre but there was also some runoff success for Hawke’s Bay centre trialists, the two centres between them claiming nine of the 28 runoff places across the four classes at Earnscleug­h Station, near Alexander.

Arends was the most successful, with half-brothers Parker and Tarn first and second in the long head. Parker also claimed third place in the short head and yard, in which Brent Matthews, also from Mokotuku club, was runner-up with Reef.

Arends, who also had a hunterway in the five-day championsh­ips at Earnscleug­h, has now qualified for 26 South Island, North Island or New Zealand championsh­ips runoffs with 12 dogs, dating to the first in 1986 — a South Island and NZ titles double with Pat at Hakatarame­a, South Canterbury.

He’s now won five South Island titles, three North Island championsh­ips and three New Zealand championsh­ips, but Friday’s win ended a wait of 18 years since the last of the big triumphs in 2005.

Magee, who has been trialling dogs for just two years, got onto the leaderboar­d for a few days at his island and national championsh­ips debut in Southland last year, and set a goal to win.

On Friday, the win with bitch Edge became the first Open title for either the man or his dog at any level, although they had a solid formline together, with 11 second placings in 16 runoffs.

Veteran Waikoau trialist Kevin O’Connor, who became a household name in winning three titles on A Dogs Show about 40 years ago, was fourth in the long head with Jax, Howard Inglis, from the WaimaramaM­araetotara club, was fourth in the short head and yard, and Ned George, of Wairoa, was second and fourth in the zig-zag hunt with Pitch and Kruger respective­ly.

Magee, a former pupil of St John’s College, Hastings, and son of trialist Grant Magee, bought into the line of Neville Marr, a longtime trialist who placed in a NZ championsh­ips runoff in 1993.

With time to burn while on the Cook Strait ferry on Saturday, Magee said he’d rung Marr straight after the win. “He was almost crying,” Magee said.

Soon headed to become a stockman on a property near Taihape, Magee says sheep dog trialling has become his sport, and the training uplevel. “I put a lot of time and energy into it,” he said. “Every morning and evening.”

The South Island won both other titles at Earnscleug­h, the short head and yard to Scott McRae, of Molesworth, with Cory, and the zig-zag hunt won by Steve Kerr, of Mackenzie, with

Holly.

The pandemic had made it a tough season, with 14 club trials cancelled up and down the east coast, and the loss of almost 2000 of the points by which competitor­s qualify their dogs for the series each season.

The North Island and New Zealand championsh­ips are on May 30-June 4, at Taumarunui.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Makotuku shepherd Sam Magee and Edge after their South Island championsh­ips straight hunt win — their first Open win at any level.
Photo / Supplied Makotuku shepherd Sam Magee and Edge after their South Island championsh­ips straight hunt win — their first Open win at any level.

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