The next World shearing and wool handling championships will be held in Invercargill on February 9-11, 2017.
The event, expected to attract competitors from about 30 countries, will be held at ILT Stadium Southland and be known as Golden Shears World Championships Southland 2017.
The event is held every 2-4 years, and the championships in Invercargill will be the 17th, marking the 40th anniversary of the first, held in England in 1977.
At the 16th championships in Ireland last year, it was announced the event would be held in Christchurch.
But a new location has been confirmed in an announcement by new Shearing Sports New Zealand chairman David Fagan and fellow former major title winner Tom Wilson, chairman of the New Zealand Shearing Foundation, a trust formed to manage revenue from the event.
Sponsorship and other funding is now being sought with the cost of staging the championships like to be several hundred thousand dollars, Mr Fagan said.
The international flavour and camaraderie of the international shearing world was highlighted when Australian shearer Shannon Warnest, of Australia, and Joanne Kumeroa, of New Zealand, both champions, trained together before the 2008 World championships in Norway. The next chamnpionships will be held in Invercargill, New Zealand, on February 9-11, 2017. Joanne Kumeroa, who won two individual and three teams World titles, died earlier this year.
Mr Fagan, of Te Kuiti, won the championships’ glamour open machine shearing title five times, in 1988, 1992, 1996, 1998 and 2003, while Mr Wilson, a Scotsman now living in New Zealand, won the title in 1984.
They said that the facilities in Invercargill will be possibly the best in the World for the event, and there is a “huge groundswell” of support from the Invercargill City Council, other local bodies in the area, and rural Southland, which already hosts three of the major events on the Shearing Sports New Zealand calendar each summer.
The venue, already known as a significant indoor sports stadium, will hold 7-8000 people, which organisers hope will be attracted to the major titles showdowns, the individual and teams machine shearing, blades shearing and woolhandling finals.
Invercargill Mayor Tim Shadbolt is enthusiastic, telling the Southland Times: “It’s certainly is an exciting event.”
The championships are run under the auspices of the Golden Shears World Council, which takes its name from the Golden Shears international championships held in Masterton annually since 1961.
The World Championships have been held in Masterton four times, but the 2017 championships will be the first in the South Island.