Queensland shearers had a colourful language all their own
Jondaryan Woolshed Association's Historical Research Officer John Eggleston compiled this glossary of shearing terms.
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babbling brook |
The shearers cook. In early times, the cook was paid by a subscription from the shearers and shed hands. Nowadays the cook is paid by the property owner or contractor. |
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bait layer |
The shearers cook. The men who cooked for shearers in those early times, like the shearers themselves, were a tough and rugged breed and their cooking prowess was not always their greatest asset. More often than not, the shearers' opinion of their cook was not a case of 'who called the cook a bastard', but rather 'who called the bastard a cook'. |
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bare-bellied yoe |
A sheep with completely-shaved belly. |
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blades |
The hand shears used by shearers before the advent of the machine-driven shears. |
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blind blow |
The blow that a shearer takes when opening up the fleece up the neck of the sheep, when they are unable to see what the blades, or handpiece is doing and have to go by feel alone. |
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blow |
A single sweeping cut in the fleece that a shearer takes with the blades, or handpiece. |
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blue-tongue |
A shed hand, many of whom were young boys. The shearers alleged that these boys spent most of their time catching flies, as does a blue-tongue lizard. |
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board |
The floor along the wall of the shearing shed where the sheep are shorn. |
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bog-eye |
The shearer's handpiece. The word comes from the Aboriginal word 'bogii' meaning lizard. The original handpieces had a resemblance to a lizard. |
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boots |
The boss of the board. The man in charge of operations in the shearing shed. Often this was the first evidence the shearer saw of the boss. It was the warning the shearers called when the boss was around. |
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bowyangs |
Boot laces that were tied around the legs of trousers just below the knee, to hold the trousers in and keep them clear of the shears. |
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brownie |
A popular shearers smoko cake. |
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brownie gorger |
A shed hand boy. In early times, many of the shed hands were young boys and like all young boys, they were always hungry. |
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catching pen |
The small yards, or pens situated inside the shed next to the shearing board, where the shearers caught the sheep to shear them. Two shearers sheared from each pen. |
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chaff |
Second-cut wool. Short wool that has taken more than one cut to remove it from the sheep. |
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chaffer |
An inexperienced, or poor shearer. A shearer who has to take many second and sometimes third cuts to remove all the wool from the sheep. |
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chinaman |
A sheep with a tuft of wool left on its rump, |
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chute |
The opening in the shed wall next to each shearer, where the shorn sheep exit into the counting-out pens. |
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cobbler |
The worst sheep to shear left in the pen until last. A sheep shunned by each shearer, who hoped his mate would get it to shear. |
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combs and cutters |
The cutting end of the handpiece. The comb, with its many long teeth, is fixed to the base of the handpiece and the three-toothed cutter is driven back and forth across this, cutting the wool picked up by the comb. |
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counting-out pen |
The pen situated outside the shed opposite each individual shearer, which held the sheep shorn by the shearer. These were counted by the shed boss and added to the shearer's tally. |
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cracker |
A very old sheep, usually toothless and worthless. |
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cut-out |
The completion of the shearing in a shed for the season. |
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dags |
The dried excreta hanging to the wool around a sheep's tail. |
|
ducks on the pond |
Ladies in, or approaching the shearing shed, so watch your language. The warning called by shearers when ladies were around. |
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expert |
The man who was in charge of all the machinery. He sharpened the combs and cutters for most of the shearers. Some shearers preferred to sharpen their own combs and cutters. |
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flea taxi |
The sheep dog. |
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guesser |
The man who classed the wool. |
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gun |
A top class shearer, or the best shearer in a shed or gang. |
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handpiece |
The business end of the machine shears that the shearer holds to shear the sheep. That part of machine shears that drives the cutter back and forth over the comb to cut the fleece from the sheep. |
|
hogget |
A yearling sheep. |
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hollow log |
A sheep dog, |
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in the grease |
Shearing sheep with unwashed wool. In the old blade shearing days, the wool was washed on the sheep's back before they were shorn. However, the rams and ewes heavy in lamb were not washed for fear of damaging them and they were shorn in the grease. Since the advent of machine shears, all sheep are shorn in the grease. |
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jewellery |
The shearer's combs and cutters. The condition of these pieces of equipment affected how a shearer was able to shear and they were treated like pieces of jewellery. |
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jumbuck |
An early term for a sheep, mostly used by shepherds and shearers. |
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lizard |
The shearer's handpiece. Some early handpieces looked like a lizard in their shape. |
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locks |
Short second-cut wool that falls through the rollers of the skirting table, or is swept up off the shearing board. |
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long blow |
The long sweeping cuts the shearer takes along the first side and back of the sheep. |
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lounge-about |
Young shedhand boys. |
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moccasin |
The homemade footwear shearers use, usually made from bag or felt. |
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monkey's eyebrows |
Short wool shorn from lambs. |
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penner-up |
The shed hand responsible for keeping the shearers catching pens filled with sheep. |
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pick-up |
The oldest and most experienced boys in the shed, whose job it was to pick up the shorn fleece from the shearing board and carry it to the skirting table, where they threw the fleece out on the table with the outside up. |
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plumb jams |
Lambs. |
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pony boy |
Usually the youngest most inexperienced boy in the shed, whose job it was to carry the rolled up fleece from the skirting table to the classer's table. |
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quart pots |
Very young lambs. |
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red eyes |
Wethers. |
|
ringer |
The fastest shearer in the shed. |
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rosella |
A sheep that has lost part of its fleece. |
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rouse-about |
An adult shed hand. |
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run |
A two hour shearing period. |
|
screen |
The skirting table. |
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second-cut |
Short wool resulting from a shearer not taking the wool off close enough to the sheep's skin and having to make a second cut to remove the rest of the wool. |
|
sheep-o |
The call from shearers for the penner-up to fill their catching pen with sheep. |
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skirting table |
The table, or tables set in the centre of the shed, the tops of which are made up of wooden rollers. The shorn fleece is thrown out on this with the outside up, so the second cut wool will fall off and the stained wool can be removed from around the edges. |
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snagger |
An old shearer, who is past retirement age, but doesn't want to retire. |
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snob |
A bad sheep to shear. |
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snowed-in |
A condition that occurs in a shearing shed, when one part of the shearing team is unable to handle the amount of wool that is coming from the shearers, thus causing a bottleneck and a backlog of fleeces in that department, which eventually brings the shed to a halt. |
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socks |
Wool left on the legs of a sheep between the knee and the foot. |
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squeezer |
The wool presser. |
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stand |
The place on the shearing board occupied by each shearer. |
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steel beak |
A shed hand. |
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sweat rag |
A shearers towel. |
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sheep-up |
A shedhand boy, whose task it is to sweep each shearer's stand clean of wool after the shorn fleece is picked up. |
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swagger |
Lucky fellow |
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tally |
The number of sheep shorn by each shearer. |
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tally-bound |
A psychological barrier that a shearer appears unable to break, when his tally reaches a certain number. A shearer's description of the counter, when he believes he has shorn more sheep than he is credited with. |
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tar boy |
A young boy shed hand whose task it was to put Stockholm Tar, a special tar dressing, on the wounds of badly-cut sheep. |
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tassel |
A lock, or tuft of wool left hanging on a shorn sheep. |
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team |
All the people working in a shearing shed during shearing. |
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tick squasher |
A wool presser. |
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tongs |
Shearing blades, or hand shears. |
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tube |
The metal down-tube that carries the flexible drive-shaft that powers the handpiece. |
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tussock jumpers |
Station hands. |
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weeding the garden |
Plucking wool from a sheep that has been missed by the shearer. |
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wether |
An adult male sheep that has been castrated. |
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whipping side |
The short quick blows taken by the shearer around the side of the sheep while it is in the sitting position. |
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white wash |
The removal of just enough wool to make a sheep's fleece white, usually applying to lambs when they are first shorn. |
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wigging |
The removal of wool from around the eyes of a sheep to prevent wool-blindness. |
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Wolseleys |
An early term for machine shears. Wolseley developed the earliest machine-driven shears. |
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wool-away |
A shearer's call to the pick-up boy to clear the wool from his stand. |
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wool blind |
Sheep that are unable to see due to the amount of wool around their eyes. |
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wool roller |
A person working on the skirting table, removing the stained wool from the fleece. |
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wooled-up |
The situation that occurs in a shearing shed when the shearers are shearing quicker than the wool can be handled. When wool gets caught up in a shearer's down-tube, or the back joint of the handpiece, causing overheating of the equipment. |
|
yoe |
An early shearers' term for a ewe, or an adult female sheep |




