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Home / The Country

Top prices paid at Whanganui dog trials fundraiser

Laurel Stowell
Laurel Stowell
Reporter·Whanganui Chronicle·
6 Feb, 2022 09:30 PM3 mins to read

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Auctioneer Chris Hay (right) talks to Neville Hughes, who sold four dogs at the Parapara/Makirikiri Sheep Dog Sale. Photo/ Brenda O'Leary

Auctioneer Chris Hay (right) talks to Neville Hughes, who sold four dogs at the Parapara/Makirikiri Sheep Dog Sale. Photo/ Brenda O'Leary

A sheepdog sold for more than $10,000 at a fundraising auction near Whanganui last month could be the top price paid in New Zealand, one observer says.

Kimbolton man David Stuart sold his huntaway named Coal for $12,000 at the sale held at the Parapara/Makirikiri Dog Trial Club on January 23.

The New Zealand Sheep Dog Trial Association puts out a newsletter that covers dog sales every year, Parapara/Makirikiri Dog Trial Club secretary Brenda O'Leary said.

"To date the huntaway sold at our sale for $12,100 is the highest price I have seen recorded in New Zealand."

Hunterville farmer Shane Hurley bought the dog.

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As a comparison, in 2019 a dog sold at the PGG Ashburton Sheep and Cattle Dog Sale for $10,000 was a record in that event's 63-year history.

Other top sellers on January 23 were Hawke's Bay man Rob Gallien's huntaway Dodge - $10,500 - and two-year-old heading dog Haze - $9800.

Taranaki's Brad Bielski sold young huntaway Siege for $9000, and Howard Ingles sold five-year-old heading dog Floss for $8100.

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Phoebe Smailes from Ruahine is likely to use the $6000 fetched by her two-year-old heading dog Nippy to pay for her university study.

 Phoebe Smailes sold her heading dog Nippy for $6000. Photo / Brenda O'Leary
Phoebe Smailes sold her heading dog Nippy for $6000. Photo / Brenda O'Leary

In the Parapara/Makirikiri Dog Trial Club fundraiser, the dogs were auctioned by independent farming livestock agent Chris Hay, and the event was advertised in publications and on Facebook.

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The sale is one of four working-dog sales in New Zealand, O'Leary said, and one where the dog owner gets most of the proceeds.

It is a fundraiser, with dog owners paying the club $100 for each dog put up for sale and pocketing the rest of the sale price. It probably raised more than $3000 for the club, organisers said.

It's the third year the sale has been held on Wellington Anniversary weekend, and its reputation is growing. O'Leary believes it provides a service, both to farmers and to breeders and trainers.

"A lot of the dogs are quite well bred. Some of the people selling them were well-known dog trial people, with a really good reputation and really good dogs," O'Leary said.

There were about 100 people at the day, held at a property Duncan Atkinson manages in Ruatangata Rd, near Whangaehu.

People came from Whitianga, Wellington, Martinborough and Hawke's Bay, and there was even an inquiry from the South Island.

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"There's huge demand for broken sheepdogs. There were people there that went away and couldn't get a dog.

"No one left there until the last dog was sold."

There's a lot involved in training a dog, O'Leary said. It takes two years to make them "foolproof".

The day was a social one too, she said, with people catching up on news, and barbecue food provided by Glynis Best and her team in the cookhouse.

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