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BIG KAHUNA CHARITY PUNTERS CLUB COMP SAT 21st JUNE

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Posted

Ross is retiring from his role as Clerk of the Course.

He will be greatly missed.

A fabulous all around contributor and ambassador to our Equine sector who many have had the pleasure of been introduced to patting a horse and the equine world who are all the more enriched as a result.

We hope all those who meet him over his 60 years plus contributions have either encouraged others, or taken up a career in the wider sector as participants.

Enjoy your retirement with family and friends and acquaintances Ross

Thank you for your service is the last race at Ellerslie Racecourse on Saturday

https://img.nzracing.co.nz/RaceInfo/53355/Meeting-Overview.aspx

 

Enjoy a couple of reflective articles on him from days gone by

https://img.nzracing.co.nz/News/47756/RossColes-EllerslieClerkOfTheCourse.aspx

Twelve Questions: Ross Coles

NZ Herald
4 Mar, 2014 05:30 AM6 mins to read

https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/racing/twelve-questions-ross-coles/LQMIDHH7NK55JVQ546YLU5AR6Y/

 

Posted
2 hours ago, scooby3051 said:

How bad is Rodley made a big fuss about getting on a horse to interview him and didn't even get his name right called him Ross Coleman...totally unacceptable.

And said he had being doing it for over 40 years , Ross corrected him .

Great effort by Ross to be sitting on a horse that long at his age , I struggle to stay in my chair that long .

Posted
1 hour ago, nomates said:

And said he had being doing it for over 40 years , Ross corrected him .

Great effort by Ross to be sitting on a horse that long at his age , I struggle to stay in my chair that long .

Why? He's only half your age.

I felt for the horse though 😥

Posted
1 hour ago, THE TORCH said:

And well done to Leith for saying that was the highlight of his day - very respectful to the Coles family.

And as for Rodley...another example of some Trackside presenters who feel its all bout them. Just do your job properly for once.

50 plus years of service to the industry and Rodley can not even get his name correct...shows how much or little he cares about his job you would think if he had any passion for the industry like Leith he could of at least got that right and how long he had been a clerk of the course for...its called research you moron....do the job properly you are paid to do.

Posted

12 Questions: Ross Coles

www.nzherald.co.nz
4 March 2014

Ross Coles has no plans to stop riding horses. Photo / Jason Oxenham

 

Ross Coles, 65, has been a steward at Ellerslie Racecourse since age 14, was a champion show jumper, has managed Olympic eventing teams and is head of the Pakuranga Hunt, as was his father. He has watched the encroaching houses from his property at Karaka since he was a child.

1. You look about the right build to be a jockey - did that career never tempt you?

I had 11 rides as an amateur but decided I could make more money doing other things, which was probably the case back then. We're talking 1963, when race meetings were Saturday and Wednesday, eight races a meet, and that's all there was. Now it's seven days a week and you can make a very comfortable living. I went to the freezing works instead - in the office. Started at the bottom and worked my way up for 17 years. Left there and became a huntsman. My father was still [heading the Pakuranga Hunt] and my brother had been going to succeed him. But then he was killed in a car crash and they asked me if I'd do it. It's a salaried job and I was 25 years there. It was a great lifestyle. You're your own boss, ride a horse for a living and hunt your hounds. It's like any job, though - good days and bad days. Some days it's teeming and you still have to head out.

2. Are the racecourse stewards always from the hunt?

Traditionally the hunt supplied those who did it. My father decided on the red coats and grey horses.

The Herald would always run a page of photographs from the races - we're talking 1949 to 1952 - and Dad thought the grey horse with the red coat looked better in the pictures than the chestnut did.

So he insisted that it be done like that at Ellerslie. Australia has them now too and Singapore and other countries have started having stewards and a lot of them are greys. It's started to become a tradition.

I think it helps that there are not a lot of grey racehorses, too. It sets them apart.

3. You've got four greys in the paddock down there: do you think they know what they're doing on course?

Yeah, I think they do. They have to have the right attitude. They have to be quiet and kind. They have to do what they're asked to do, even if there's a [race] horse kicking off. The important part is making sure they don't get hurt if something's happening, that they don't get kicked, or they won't want to go back there.

4. Are you the people who get called when a horse has to be put down on course?

We're almost always the first ones there. It's not nice and we hate it. We're horsemen and we love horses. But racehorses break. There's no guns any more - it's a tranquilliser. It's awful but it's life.

5. Lots of Kiwis hunt pigs and other animals: why do you think some people are anti your kind of hunt?

It's class. I don't think it's any different to other kinds of hunting. I think people see it as elite because in England those are the people who can afford to do it. It's different here. Anyone can come on a horse and enjoy a day out with their mates in the countryside jumping fences. The bottom line is the hunting fraternity are out there for a day's entertainment, not to kill anything. If we never caught a hare no one would worry about it. This blood sport thing is bullshit.

6. Have your children shared your love of horses?

My daughter Emma is allergic. Beat that! She goes near one she coughs and splutters. My son Ben hunted but that was as far as he wanted to go. Not jumping or anything. It's all changed now. It's expensive to be involved in horses. I came back from the World Championships in Rome in 1998 [Ross was eventing team manager] and said then that our sport would become elitist. And it has. Going to pony club or whatever is still fine but if your kid wants to go to a horse show, you could pay anywhere from $20,000 to $100,000. There's some of them starting on horses that have been imported from Europe.

7. Do you dislike that aspect of the sport?

That's just the way life's gone. When we were kids growing up around here, every kid had a pony because it was free or cheap, and every family had a bit of dirt to graze it. Now you're looking at $10 a day just for grazing. What I saw in Rome was people buying incredible horses - showjumpers sell for up to $10 million. The sport now is about two athletes - the horse and the rider. It won't work if only one is good. They both have to be.

8. So Karaka's changed a bit since you were a kid?

If you could imagine this, the hunt's kennels were once in Springs Rd, East Tamaki, by the fire station and horses were ridden all around there. When we moved out here in 1953, Karaka was a long way out of town - there was no motorway. Now it's under pressure from new housing developments all around.

9. What do you do with your 20ha here?

I've got the stables and horses. We've got 3.2ha in avocados. It's been a short season here - half what it was the year before. It's not a lot of work - two or three days a week, maybe. You could have lived off [the profits] a couple of years ago, if you were mortgage-free, but not this year. You need to do something else. Do I like avocados? Not really.

10. What's the difference between Avondale and Ellerslie racecourses?

People are very relaxed at Avondale but at Ellerslie, on the big days at least, people are all dressed up for the day. It's like going to Ascot. Avondale used to have huge crowds - it was the last club to have 50c bets so people would go there because you could just bet 50c - but like all racing the TV and phone betting has had its effect. It's great to see the young people coming back to Ellerslie now with the twilight meetings. Do I bet? No. We're not allowed to.

11. You were manager when the New Zealand team of Mark Todd, Blyth Tait, Andrew Nicholson and Vaughn Jefferis won gold at the World Championships in Rome. How good was that?

It's a buzz managing a team like that. I'm not sure it's as big a buzz as winning a gold medal yourself but it was a thrill. I was team manager at the Olympics in Sydney [2000] too and that was amazing. We were there for six weeks and the riders and managers had their own lounge. You'd be sitting there drinking coffee with Princess Anne and Mark Phillips, Princess Haya of Spain. You'd just talk about life in general. In a place like that they're just like everyone else.

12. Will you ever give up riding?

At the moment I still do the races and I hunt. My body's still good - I've broken a few bones but my hips and knees are fine. At some stage I'll say I've had enough.

Posted
33 minutes ago, sunlineboy said:

I'm surprised Poppelwell wasn't on a horse wearing his Lakers jersey 🫢

Amateur hour. Rodley, whilst he seems like a nice guy, and he's a decent writer, needs a spell from our TV screens.

Haha...I just had a nightmare vision of that....Yes I just thought Ross had done the job for so long and was so well known to the wider industry...to get his name wrong and his length of service wrong, was unacceptable and showed a complete lack of professionalism for the job he is supposed to be doing.

Posted

With Ross Coles retirement, it's timely to ask , what steps in the Education sector are undertaking ensuring future generations know about these career options in New Zealand?

 

Who is taking on Ross's position?

They will need great horse riding skills, people skills and how to behave diplomatically and professionaly with TV cameras.

 

Sam Spratt?

Retired Justice Simon Moore?

Where are applications advertised for people to apply?

Local newspapers?

Schools?

Hunt and Pony Clubs?

Posted
On 6/11/2025 at 4:28 PM, meomy said:

With Ross Coles retirement, it's timely to ask , what steps in the Education sector are undertaking ensuring future generations know about these career options in New Zealand?

 

Who is taking on Ross's position?

They will need great horse riding skills, people skills and how to behave diplomatically and professionaly with TV cameras.

 

Sam Spratt?

Retired Justice Simon Moore?

Where are applications advertised for people to apply?

Local newspapers?

Schools?

Hunt and Pony Clubs?

I’m picking the Pakauranga Hunt would have it covered……..

Hardly a career option, more like a secondary employment opportunity.

 

 

Posted
On 6/11/2025 at 4:28 PM, meomy said:

With Ross Coles retirement, it's timely to ask , what steps in the Education sector are undertaking ensuring future generations know about these career options in New Zealand?

 

Who is taking on Ross's position?

They will need great horse riding skills, people skills and how to behave diplomatically and professionaly with TV cameras.

 

Sam Spratt?

Retired Justice Simon Moore?

Where are applications advertised for people to apply?

Local newspapers?

Schools?

Hunt and Pony Clubs?

Not really a career option to be widely advertised in schools if the position only comes up every 50-odd years 🤣 I'm sure whoever is in charge of applications doesn't want 600 applicants turning up and, in fact, have likely already shoulder-tapped his successor. Certainly has earned his retirement, and fantastic that he's still in good health to enjoy it.  

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