Woof! Where Queer Joy Goes Walkies in Auckland 


On Sunday 8 March, Woof! The Auckland Rainbow Dog Show returns to Ponsonbys Western Park, celebrating queer community and canine charm. Long-time Woof judge and drag legend Buckwheat tells YOUR EX why she keeps returning to this community-first event. 

For many in Tāmaki Makaurau’s rainbow community, Woof! The Auckland Rainbow Dog Show isnt just a Pride event — it’s a joyful rite of passage. Held each year under the trees of Ponsonby’s Western Park, Woof is where queerness, community and canine chaos meet, usually with glitter involved. Few people understand its evolution better than Buckwheat, one of Aotearoas most beloved drag legends and a long-time supporter and doggie judge for Woofs best in show competitions. 

When Woof first started, it was intimate and scrappy,Buckwheat reflects. Now its bigger, brighter, and far more diverse.Whats grown alongside the scale and production values is the sense of belonging. Woof has become an all-types-of-familyevent, welcoming queer folk, allies, kids, elders, dogs, and those who are just Pride-curious. Importantly, its done this without losing the grassroots warmth that made it special in the first place. 

That sense of continuity is something Buckwheat treasures. Its great seeing owners and pets return year on year,she says. You notice how theyve evolved, how committed people are to the event. Thats a testament to Woof itself.Like any good community gathering, Woof holds memories — some more chaotic than others. Asked about a moment that still lives rent-free in their head, Buckwheat laughs. I once brought my neighbours dog, Ike. Word of advice: if youre bringing a dog, make sure the dog knows you. I very much overestimated our relationship! So, leave it to the professionals or the actual owners. 

At its heart, Woof endures because its accessible and unapologetically joyful. People turn up! The numbers speak for themselves,Buckwheat says. It welcomes everyone and reminds us that celebration and visibility can be playful and healing.In a Pride landscape that can sometimes feel overwhelming or commercial, Woof offers a non-threatening, tail-wagging entry point. Its a place where being visible feels light, fun, and safe. 

That community-led ethos is exactly why events like Woof still matter, even as rainbow representation grows more mainstream. Community-led events build real relationships, trust and belonging — things institutions cant always create,Buckwheat explains. For younger or still-finding-themselves members of the community, seeing queer joy embodied matters deeply. It gives people the chance to see others living and enjoying their authentic lives. That visibility can be life-changing. 

If Woof were a drag persona? Buckwheat doesn’t hesitate. Shed be glitter-splashed, a little feral, with a big bark and an even bigger laugh. Unpredictable, warm, impossibly charming, and called, Glitterpaws Glamazon! 

That sense of playful spectacle is something Buckwheat knows intimately. With a drag career spanning four decades, their proudest moments range from performing at the 2005 Venice Dance Biennale to — as she puts it — realising she was officially ancientwhen the Auckland War Memorial Museum dedicated an exhibition to her. Whats kept drag meaningful all this time is the same thing that keeps Woof alive: people. New voices, new politics, new audiences. Drag reinvents itself, and you have to listen and make space for others. 

For younger wannabe performers, Buckwheats advice is simple and generous: be kind, honour your roots, build community before fame, and never underestimate the power of your attitude. No one likes working with a diva,she adds with a wink. 

Woof! The Auckland Rainbow Dog Show returns to Ponsonbys Western Park at 1pm on Sunday, 8 March. Bring your dog on a lead, your chosen family, and a heart full of joy and mischief. 

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