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Posted: 2023-01-02 06:03:09

When women go searching for a cricket bat, they often find they have fewer options than their male counterparts, but a Gippsland bat maker hopes to change that.

Clare Johnston has played cricket since she was a teenager, and about seven years ago learnt the trade of bat-making from former Australian cricketer Ian Callen.

She said it brought two things together that she loved.

"I used to play cricket. I love playing cricket and I like making things, and this is an old craft," Ms Johnston said.

"I really love it. I find it really, really peaceful and enjoyable to get out there in the shed and make cricket bats."

Lack of choice for women

Working from a shed on her property at Berrys Creek in South Gippsland, Ms Johnston has a particular interest in making bats for women, hoping to fill what she sees as a gap in the industry and in knowledge.

A woman in a workshop, sanding a cricket bat.
Ms Johnston at work on a bat in her Berrys Creek workshop.(ABC Gippsland: Kerrin Thomas)

"When you walk into a cricket shop, it's all about men's cricket, and often there may be just a couple of bats that are really for women's cricket," she said.

"You might have a choice of one or two bats whereas men might have 10, 15 bats.

"Often with a bat, you've got to feel it, and you pick it up and so if you've got 10 bats, you can try out 10 bats, whereas if you've got two, that's kind of all there is.

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