The A&P Show, which was to have been held this week, has been cancelled again because of bad weather that brought as much as half a year鈥檚 average rainfall to the town in only five weeks.
It鈥檚 the show鈥檚 third cancellation in four years following the show because of public gathering restrictions of the Covid-19 era, and .
Even the 2023 show went ahead with some worries after recent rain.
Though the show is cancelled equestrian events will go ahead on Saturday and the Wairoa Shears will go ahead, . A speed shear will be held on Friday night and the shears on Saturday.
The decision was made at an A&P Society meeting on Monday night, with particular concerns vehicles would struggle to get in and out of the showgrounds of Ruataniwha Rd, particularly with more rain forecast for Friday and Saturday when the show had been scheduled to take place.
As a result of the damage from the cyclone two years ago, the show鈥檚 sheepdog course remains unusable, leading to an early decision not to go ahead with the trials this year.
The continuing wet since early December led to a decision last week to cancel the show鈥檚 rodeo, for safety reasons and vehicle access difficulty, and on Saturday the Wairoa Shears committee, worried the sheep trucks could get bogged in the showgrounds, decided to shift its events.
With show jumping events unable to take place, equestrian events, previously staged over at least three days, are to be held this year on Saturday only.
鈥淯nfortunately, the grounds are too wet to run the remainder of the show,鈥 said society event manager Alice Wilson, who was on Tuesday faced with having to contact sponsors, exhibitors and competitors to tell them of the abandonment of the show, part of the fabric of northern Hawke鈥檚 Bay since it was first held in 1899.
It was also too late to run a street-fair alternative 鈥 which requires several months鈥 planning 鈥 as was done last year.
Wilson said some thought was given to it, but the committee did not want to separate events 鈥 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 not what we鈥檙e about鈥 鈥 and she hoped the community would turn out for the shearing.
The cancellation of the show is a devastating blow to the society, which has had other catastrophes in recent years, including a near-washout in 2010, when the shearing was moved at the last minute to a woolshed outside the town, and trade-display tractors were put to use hauling horse floats and other vehicles out of the quagmire.
The lost revenue, re-sowing the grounds and other repairs were financially crippling for the society, but the 2023 cyclone was even worse, with buildings flooded and damaged, trees downed and hectares covered in silt.
The society pavilion is still out of action, but another re-sowing of the grounds had them 鈥渓ooking a picture鈥 in recent weeks, Wilson said.
The cancellation is also part of a continuing series of blows to Wairoa apart in addition the impacts of the weather that included the loss of its annual horse races in rationalisation of the racing industry nationwide.
The Wairoa Racing Club races date back more than 140 years and were last held in 2020.
The club鈥檚 Te Kupenga course survived mainly unscathed in the cyclone and club president Paul Toothill, while still battling to get the races back, hopes the facilities can be developed to become the district鈥檚 events centre.
Part of the showgrounds is also being considered as the path for a flood spillway for the river that winds around the grounds.
Mayor Craig Little, a past president of the Wairoa A&P Society and whose own history with both big events dates back to preschool days, described the latest cancellation as 鈥渟o sad鈥, for both the district and an active committee that had worked hard to get the facilities 鈥渂ack into shape鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just another good thing that鈥檚 not happening,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey are the big events for the whole district, the whole family would be out,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e used to go every year. No matter who you are or where you鈥檙e from, they are the events that bring the community together.鈥
Doug Laing is a senior reporter based in Napier with Hawke鈥檚 Bay Today and has 51 years of journalism experience, 41 of them in Hawke鈥檚 Bay, in news gathering, including breaking news, sports, local events, issues and personalities.
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