All Black Jack Goodhue's mullet is pinker and curlier than usual but it's still business in the front and party in the back after the public voted to save his famous hair-do.
Hundreds of people attended Mullet in the Park at the Kerikeri Sports Complex yesterdayto celebrate mullets and find out the fate of what is arguably New Zealand's best-known mullet.
The event was the culmination of the Summer of the Mullet campaign which encouraged residents to grow a mullet to raise $100,000 for the Bald Angels Charitable Trust which supports at-risk youth and needy families via its various networks and programmes.
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The public had until February to have their say on whether Goodhue's famous locks should stay or be shaved off but on the day the "stay" vote won and the Kawakawa All Black's mullet was permed and dyed pink.