AUSTRALIA-based Taumarunui shearers and brothers Floyde Neil (left) and Levi Neil (right) pictured during their record-breaking day on Saturday at Rockliffe, about 280km south-southeast of Perth. Photo Taesa Brown
The back wasn’t the best, but it was good enough for Taumarunui shearers Floyde and Levi Neil who claimed a bit of record-breaking merino shearing history in the wilds of southern West Australia, recently.
Barely concealing the agony of lower and middle back pain, 30-year-old Floyde Neil, from Taumarunui, set a new world solo nine-hour merino ewe-shearing record of 540 at Rockliffe, about 280km south-southeast of Perth and a few kilometres from where he has grown one of the state’s bigger shearing businesses at Boyup Brook.
The sheep-a-minute pace broke the previous record of 530 shorn by fellow-New Zealander Stacey Te Huia in New South Wales eight years ago and was also part of Neil’s establishing a two-stand record of 1066 with his 28-year-old brother, who shore 526.
Needing an average of 59 an hour to break the individual record, Floyde Neil got off to a big start with 121 in the first two hours to breakfast at 7am, and despite the bolt-upright flexes of the back needed with every sheep dispatched, later in the day still managed 30 in the last half hour to the 5pm finish, claiming the record with less than nine minutes to go.
With about 100 people watching – from supporters to the simply curious – he became only the second shearer to average a sheep a minute or quicker in an adult merinos record attempt.
In the nature of record shearing, among the significant team of helpers on Saturday was Lou Brown, originally from the Hawke’s Bay and who in the same woolshed four years ago shore 497 at under 58 seconds a sheep to break the record for eight hours.
There were at least six others with World Record credentials, Neil saying that neither he nor his brother could have reached their goals without them.
One was father Roger Neil, who sold his own shearing run in Taumarunui last year, is currently working “helping out the boys” in West Australia, and couldn’t have been happier, saying he was even more proud than when he was one of a quartet in a four-stand strong wool lamb shearing record in New Zealand 16 years ago.
Another was Cartwright Terry, originally from Cambridge and who with brother Michael set two-stand merino ewes record for eight hours, which still stands after 20 years – one of 57 record attempts “Carty” has been to over the years, more often than not as one of the crew.
“I’m addicted,” he confessed.
It was originally meant to have been a solo effort, which Roger Neil and Cartwright Terry agreed could have seen it go up 20 or more sheep with a better selection, but the course changed when Floyde decided two to three months ago he wanted to also claim the vacant two-stand, needing double the number to be selected from the target flock.
Terry said before the record bid that although the nine-hour day is barely a feature of Australian shearing any longer, “both boys” were capable of 550 or more, and in time the record could go over 650.
“But let’s be realistic, let’s set a two-stand world record and then hopefully they shear more than 530 each to secure a solo title,” he said.
With nine-hour days in the woolshed all but confined to the past, it was Floyde Neil’s first in Australia, and his first anywhere since a day near Rotorua about seven years ago, while Levi Neil had never shorn a nine-hour day.
Neither of the new record holders had previously done more than 500 ewes in a day, on either fine wool merinos or the more tally-friendly strong wool types more common in New Zealand.
Floyde Neil has been shearing since his teens and entered the record books in November with a crossbred lambs record, which stood for less than three months.
Married with two children, he is looking at options for further records – possibly another crossbred lambs’ bid later this year.
He’s also planning as many as six trips to New Zealand next summer for the national shearing circuit, with a target of winning the right to represent New Zealand in the annual home and away trans-Tasman shearing tests.
But there is the issue of the back pain, which his father said was evident beforehand, and the record-breaking shearer rightly needs a couple of weeks off before shearing again.
Levi Neil, who despite the family history in shearing was a comparative latecomer – working in the meatworks for Silver Fern Farms in the South Island before turning his hand to the woolshed.
He was chuffed that his brother had given him the chance.
Judging convenor Alistair Emslie, of Kurow, said Floyde Neil had had one “reject” during the day and Levi Neil four, as the panel of four kept a close watch on the quality.
Floyde Neil had an average quality rating of 16.74, and Levi Neil 17.24, each within the limit of 18 penalties.




