And next weekend they are off to Timaru to contest the South Island Golden Gloves, where the youngest member of the family will have his first competitive fight.
Awatea Henry (10) will join his mother Cherine Henry (32).
Boxing New Zealand believes it will probably be the first time a mother and son have fought on the same card in this country.
The pair will have familiar face in the corner. Ryan Henry (35) is father, husband and coach.
A fourth family member also dabbles in boxing. But 13-year-old Zsana is happy just training and does not plan to get into the ring any time soon.
"A family that fights together, stays together," Ryan joked.
"Last year we made New Zealand fighting history when we became the first husband and wife combination to fight another husband and wife. There were two licensed boxing instructors in the corner with two registered female fighters. It was wife fighting, really."
If anything goes wrong, Ryan, as the coach, gets the blame. But Cherine said she has some mixed feelings about letting her son get into the ring.
"I'm a little bit nervous but he is pretty prepared," she said.
"He has done a lot of sparring and a lot of training leading up to this, so I'm confident for him.
"It is very hard for the kids to get hurt because they've got big gloves on, head gear ... and mouth guards."
Awatea is not worried either, even though he is likely to fight someone a little older.
"A couple of months ago I was a bit nervous but now I'm OK," he said.
Neither pugilist will find out who they will fight until after the weigh-in.
Cherine won the South Island featherweight division last year and has had 12 amateur bouts.
She may have to step up a division to get a fight at the tournament. Awatea will fight in the cadet division and both represent the Fight and Fitness Academy in Dunedin.