Allan Godsiff was born and raised
on the South Island of New Zealand, where the sheep easily outnumber the
human inhabitants. His father was a sheep and cattle farmer, and Allan was
drawn to the art of shearing from his boyhood.
"I would watch the shearers
when they came each year to shear our sheep," said Godsiff. "It seemed
a decent, if hard, way to earn a living."
When Godsiff turned 17, he
got a job as a learner-shearer and gradually mastered all the tricks of
the shearing trade. His shearing jobs during the summer financed his college
courses, and after two years he earned a diploma in Farm Management.
"All I ever wanted to do was
raise livestock," Godsiff said. "Even though my teachers told me it was
a waste of a good brain, I disagreed and went ahead with it anyway."
Godsiff met his wife Kathryn
while attending college. An Oregon lass, Kathryn came to New Zealand as
part of a student exchange program with Oregon State University. Not long
after they began dating, Allan invited Kathryn to help out in a woolshed
where he was shearing.
"She seemed suitably impressed
with my technique," Godsiff admitted.
Kathryn agreed. "Good shearers
get into a rhythm, it is almost like a kind of dance. I loved watching
Allan's grit and determination. It was awesome!"
Rhythm or not, according to
Godsiff, shearing is hard work.
"It might look easy," he said,
"but one university in New Zealand did a study and found that eight hours
of shearing uses the energy equivalent of running two marathons back to
back. Shearing hurts, so we do it by the clock. It is too daunting to
face eight steady hours of that kind of work, so we break it into two-hour
runs with tea and food breaks in between."
Godsiff uses a technique developed
by a fellow New Zealander, Godfrey Bowen. Bowen traveled around the country
as a young man and was able to observe a variety of shearing methods.
He was then able to perfect a continuous shearing motion, which decreased
the worker's energy output.
Bowen devised a new position
for holding the sheep, which lightened the strain on the shearer's back.
One of the greatest attributes of this style was Bowen's use of the non-shearing
hand to stretch out the sheep's skin. This ensured a more evenly shorn
fleece, a desirable quality for wool buyers. His technique has been adopted
by shearers around the world.
"A lot of shearers come to
New Zealand to learn the Bowen technique," said Godsiff. "But I never
went to shearing school -- just learned as I went. I've probably shorn
over 100,000 sheep since I started."
After Godsiff got his college
diploma, he followed his American sweetheart back to the U.S.
They married in Oregon and
managed a sheep farm in Clatskanie before heading back to New Zealand.
"I managed sheep and cattle
farms in New Zealand until 1999," said Godsiff. "We decided to move back
to Oregon then so Kathryn could be closer to her parents and our three
sons could be Americans."
Although Godsiff is not currently
managing a ranch -- he and Kathryn manage a resort in Camp Sherman --
he still finds an occasional sheep to shear.
"I do a bit of shearing of
4-H sheep and for anyone else who doesn't want to tackle the job themselves,"
said Godsiff.
He also shears goats. The
Bible says that a lamb before shearers is silent -- but not goats!
"One time I sheared some young
goats in New Zealand," he said. "They cried so loudly that they frightened
the children who were watching my shearing demonstration. We stuck with
sheep for demos after that."
Shearing doesn't hurt the
animals in any way, although some breeds are less receptive than others.
"The worst sheep are the Border
Leicester -- they actually blow snot at you as you shear them," Godsiff
said.
"The average shearer does
between 250 to 300 sheep a day," he said. "The world record is over 800
sheep in eight hours. Those top shearers actually have trainers to keep
them in shape."
While Godsiff has never been
a show shearer, his record is an impressive 400 lambs in one day.
"Shearing 400 lambs was quite
a milestone for me," he said. "I knew each lamb was another kilometer
closer to Kathryn and that was pretty motivating."