It isn't the biggest event of its kind, but the Broadwood showgrounds are arguably the prettiest to be found anywhere, and the North Hokianga A&P Association continues to keep alive traditions that go back for more than a century.
Saturday's 106th show didn't, unfortunately, maintain the reputation that the event once had as a reliable drought-breaker, but there was a cool breeze and plenty to see, from some accomplished equestrians to shearing and chopping, and a hall where the classes probably haven't changed in generations but unfailingly produce some fine exhibits.
The fruit and vegetable entries were especially impressive this year, despite the challenges many gardeners must have faced as the long hot summer hammered their produce, while a North Hokianga special, chainsaw carving, attracted just the one participant, Kohukohu beef farmer Neil Matheson.
He drew inspiration from all sorts of sources, he said, his 2020 creation carved from a slab of macrocarpa being a "spiral thingee".
On the showgrounds proper, Sandra Davidson and Justin Robb had their Precast Products troughs on display, for anyone who thought troughs had ceased evolving once someone worked out that they should be round or oblong and could be made from concrete.