Otago Daily Times

Oh brother! Linda in running

- SALLY RAE

IT could go down in history.

If Linda Taggart wins the OtagoSouth­land regional final of the FMG Young Farmer of the Year contest, she will join her brother, Roscoe, as part of the first brotherand­sister combinatio­n to compete in the event’s grand final.

Roscoe Taggart (26) has clinched a spot in the Tasman regional final in Christchur­ch on April 7 while Miss Taggart (25) will compete in the OtagoSouth­land final on April 21 in Winton.

Not that Miss Taggart is confident about the prospect she will be going headtohead with her sibling in the grand final in Invercargi­ll in July

She remarked the sibling con nection was ‘‘quite hard case’’.

Mr Taggart runs the family 732ha sheep, beef and cropping farm at Oxford while Miss Taggart is an Invercargi­llbased rural banker with Rabobank.

As children, they would watch the Young Farmer grand final on television, trying to guess the answers to the questions, Mr Taggart recalled.

Their father Murray, who is chairman of Alliance Group, always encouraged them to give the contest a go and eventually they did.

A member of Nightcaps Young Farmers, Miss Taggart has competed in three district contests. This will be her first regional final.

The contest was good fun and a great way to test her skills ‘‘on a whole range of things’’.

Her brother did a ‘‘fantastic’’ job managing a diverse and challengin­g business and had skills she could ‘‘only dream of’’. She did not think he would have to worry about her ending up in the grand final.

Mr Taggart got a taste of a grand final as the official bag carrier in last year’s event for Andrew Wiffen, of Tasman.

He said it was his sister’s day job that made him nervous.

‘‘She’s more switched on than me. Linda could be a force to be reckoned with when it comes to the theoryrela­ted modules. I’d be doing my best to put her off as much as I could if we both make it to Invercargi­ll,’’ he said, laughing.

Miss Taggart, who completed an agricultur­e degree at Lincoln University, has become immersed in the Southland community since shifting south.

Her hobbies include hockey — she has represente­d Southland — and dog trials and she is a member of the Kauana dog trial club.

Working for Rabobank was a great opportunit­y to look at different businesses and how people ran them. It was also a chance to meet a lot of people and build ‘‘amazing’’ networks.

Her parents would be coming down from Oxford to watch her compete in the regional final and she intended to have a ‘‘good crack’’ at it, alongside some ‘‘pretty good competitio­n’’.

She and her brother did some shared study in preparatio­n for their respective regional events.

In her first year, she did not expect to do particular­ly well but it would be a good learning curve, she said.

 ??  ?? Linda Taggart
Linda Taggart

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand