Monday, 19 August 2013

August 2013 - Lightning Ridge to Longreach


Lightning Ridge is home to one of the artists that did one of the "Utes in the Paddock" back in Forbes.  John Murray did the ute with the Galahs representing the young fellows that typically drive utes on farms.  We looked at his gallery as his style of painting depicts the outback and he has a wonderful way of painting emus, cockatoos and other outback scenes.  I cheekily took some photos of his paintings which were displayed in the bowling club.  He is not politically correct as he did a painting of Tony Abbott in his "budgie smuggler" swimming trunks as well as one of an emu with Julia Gillard's head and hair style.  Once we got to know his style of painting, we recognized his work for miles around.
The weather in Lightning Ridge turned bleak and rain was pending so we packed up and headed for Queensland.  We crossed the border from NSW at a little town called Hebel where John Murray has painted emus looking through windows that he had painted on the walls of the old pub.  After a look around Hebel we traveled onto St George.

We had heard about a caravan park called Kapunda Fishing Park which is right on the Balonne river and just north of the town.  We originally booked a powered site for 2 nights which were OK if you needed the convenience of power, but when we had a walk around the park we discovered the non powered camping sites which are right beside the river.  Talk about "absolute" river frontage, we parked the caravan not more than 3 metres from the river and were able to sit in the shade of our awning with the fishing rods in.  This site was so relaxing we ended up staying a week.  The biggest downfall was having to use straight river water for showering and washing up etc, but overall it was a fantastic week.  Unfortunately the fish count wasn't good with 3 carp, one undersized eel tailed catfish and 1 undersized silver perch.
We met some wonderful fellow campers while we were there including Greg and Noelene who had many stories to share of their travels around the country.
Greg put us onto 2 really good Apps which are well worth sharing.  Every camper travelling Australia should have Wiki Camps, it is only a couple of dollars but is a wealth of information on caravan and camping spots around the country.  It also comes with excellent maps to help find these places.
Greg and Noelene are keen bird watchers and they had an app called The Michael Morcombe & David Stewart eGuide to Australian Birds.  This one is more expensive but is a fantastic tool for identifying birds.  It even has sound effects of the bird calls.  It is interesting to see the reaction of the birds in the close proximity when you play their call.

St George is at the centre of the cotton growing industry in south west Queensland with up to 70,000 hectares of cotton grown within the Balonne shire when conditions allow.  Just to the east of St George is a 12,000 hectare irrigation development where cotton is grown by various farmers.  The paddocks are huge with the distinctive furrows ploughed all in the same direction so the water runs through the paddock when they irrigate.  They have also installed huge above ground water storage "dams" they call turkeys nests.  These are filled from the channels during the wet season and the water used for irrigation during the growing season which is October to March in this area. 
There is also a cotton gin where local cotton is processed.  It is easy to pick the cotton growing areas as the sides of the roads are "littered" with cotton which seems to blow off the trucks carrying the bales to the gin.  Seems like a waste to me and I think their method of transport needs to be reviewed to stop this waste.  Where there is good water, there are cotton plants growing along the side of the road.  At this time of the year they look like a dead bush about 1 metre high that somebody sprinkled a bag of cotton balls over.  


The harvested cotton comes from the farm in a round bale wrapped in yellow plastic around the outside but not on the edges.  This is where the loose cotton blows off from during transport.
We gathered information on cotton growing and I have scanned it for those who might be interested to find out more about cotton growing.  We found it very fascinating. 



About 44 kilometres south east of St George is the rambling historic Nindigully Pub nestled on the Moonie River.  This pub was established in 1864 and was the Cobb & Co. Coach change over station from the late 1800's to the early 1900's.  It is believed to hold the longest continual liquor licence in Queensland.  It still runs as a pub but is more of an iconic attraction these days.  There is a free camp on the river only about 100 metres from the pub so it is very popular with the campers.
Their signature dish is the "Road train Burger" which is a 5.5 kilogram hamburger in a huge bread roll.  Of course it is served with chips and it costs $60.00.  There is a note on the menu which says it feeds up to 6.  The bread roll is in the shape of the map of Queensland.  We didn't tackle it!!`

Cunnamulla sounded interesting so we took some time out to have a clean up after the bush camping at St George.  This caravan park is on the banks of the Warrego River but the river is not as easily accessible, so with fishing off the agenda, we set about having a look around the town. 

The centre of attraction is the statue of the Cunnamulla Fella.
A fellow called Stan Coster wrote the words for the song 'Cunnamulla Fella' when he was 'ringing' in the Cunnamulla district around the 1950's. Slim Dusty later recorded the song and it has more recently been recorded by Lee Kernaghan. The Cunnamulla Fella is the larrikin in all Australians. In the 1950 and 60's, Cunnamulla was enjoying prosperity and growth due to a strong wool industry. Friday and Saturday nights saw the young ringers and shearers race to town for dancin', lovin' and fightin'. These Young blokes worked hard and tomorrow was a long way off.
Artist Mike Nicholas worked in Cunnamulla as a policeman in the 1960's and these young men inspired his pen and ink drawing of the Cunnamulla Fella. He recalls seeing boys as young as 14 years old sitting on their swags outside the pubs waiting for the 'cocky' (grazier) or the mail truck to pick them up.  The statue of the Cunnamulla Fella is the work of sculptor Archie St. Claire. The details of Archie's work gives life to the Cunnamulla Fella as he gazes across the town. His expression captures a quiet moment in his day.

This is the original Slim Dusty version of the Cunnamulla Fella song
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuf0khtslUA  Sorry about the adds at the beginning but I guess that's what keeps YouTube going.

The visitors centre in Cunnamulla is possibly one of the best we have ever seen.  They have a wonderful collection of memorabilia from all around the district.  There is a 3 stand sheering plant built into the centre along with a lot of other old farm equipment.  There is also old communications equipment and newspaper clippings showing the history of the area.
The centre also runs a very informative half hour video on the formation of the Great Artesian Basin. It explains how the basin was formed and how the aboriginal people used it for 20,000 years as a food and water source.  It also explains how white man has used it and almost destroyed it by overuse and waste of water, mainly as a result of  uncapped bores which just kept pouring water down open channels where 95% of the water was lost due to seepage and evaporation.
New pipelines replacing the open channels and capping the open bores is now starting to restore the artesian basin back to it's original water pressure.
More information can be read by clicking here.   Great Artesian Basin

There is a "time tunnel" which takes visitors back 100 million years to see how the basin was formed.
It also has a story of a local grazing family that discovered the bones of 2 dinosaurs on their property near Eromanga, northwest of Cunnamulla, in 2005.  These are the largest bones of any dinosaur discovered in Australia.  It is estimated that these bones are 95 million years old.  From the bones discovered, it is estimated that these dinosaurs were around 26 metres long.  The upper leg bone is 1.5 metres long and weighs 100 kilograms so it certainly was a big animal.  Hmmm, do they realise how long ago 95 million years is?  Hard to imagine anything still being found that are that old.

Charleville is another 195 kilometres further north east and this town has a lot of history as well.  Cobb and Co ended up building all their stage coaches in Charleville as the climate was perfect for drying the timber out before the stage coach was built.  In the years before they built their coaches in Charleville, the timber wheels and axles used to crack after they had been up in this country for a while.  Moving the factory to here stopped all these problems.  Unfortunately the factory burnt down so there is nothing left to see accept the managers residence.

The Visitor Information Centre sell a CD which is a self guided tour of the town.  It takes you around the points of interest and gives a bit of their history.  We were surprised how many of the old buildings were destroyed by fire in the 1920's.  One of the pubs was burnt down twice in 20 years.
The current Commonwealth Bank was built of concrete in 1926 and is still used as a bank to this day.
There is a Cosmos centre near the airport and a lot of stargazing is done around the area.  

We stayed at the Evening Star caravan park which is 8 kilometres out of town.  It is fantastic for looking at the solar system at night as the sky is so clear and there is next to no background light.







 About 300 Brolgas live on this property when the dam is full

We visited "Woolabra" station about 40 kilometres north and did the "Brolgas and Bustards" tour.  Kevin who has owned this property since 1980, picked us up from his road gate and took us around his station for 3 hours.  We were lucky enough to be the only ones on the tour so we got to ask a lot of questions and learn a bit about station life in outback Queensland. 
Bustards are also known as "Bush Turkeys"  
Kevin said he ran a very successful sheep station producing wool up until the bottom fell out of the wool prices in the mid 80's and then the 100 year flood which occurred in 1990.  We had heard a bit about the 1990 flood on the town tour that we took, but didn't realise just how big it was.  Kevin and his family lived in a "Queenslander" style home built on stilts about 9 foot off the ground.  During the 1990 flood, they had water 10" deep in the top story of their home for a week and they were completely surrounded by water for 10 weeks.  Even after the water receded, they still couldn't get off the property for quite some weeks as the creeks were still full.   They were very glad when a helicopter dropped them some food supply after the 10 weeks as they were down to half a tin of golden syrup and 7 weetbix.
One of the heart breaks of the flood was the 15,000 sheep that they lost, including some 500 stud rams which they had just sold. The rams were in a holding yard near the house waiting for their new owners to have them picked up.  The flood water rose within 1 hour of when they first noticed it coming and they didn't have time to shift stock.  Most of the rams got washed in under the house and drowned by the flood water.  Kevin said that when the water receded and they could get the dead rams out, they were packed in nose to rump and very tightly by the pressure of the water.  Imagine 500 dead rams rotting under the house that you were trying to live in and nothing you could do about it for 10 weeks.
After the flood came the drought which just about ruined them.  In 1994 they were given a government  directive to shoot 4,000 sheep as there was nothing for them to eat.  Kevin said that the bank wanted to foreclose on them but he came up with an irrigation scheme and convinced the bank to let him try it before foreclosing.
Now, I have had a few visions myself and seen many other men with a vision, but how do you irrigate 2,000 acres of bush in outback Queensland when there is no river.  This man certainly had a vision.  Kevin new that when it rained to the east of his property there was heaps of water as was proven in the 1990 flood, all he had to do was capture it. 
The dam is dry at the moment but just needs 3" of rain to fill it
He took us and showed us his "dam".
It covers an area of 650 acres to 9 foot deep.  It holds 7,000 million litres of water and only needs 3" of rain in it's catchment area to fill it to overflowing.
He simply got on his D9 bulldozer and pushed up a wall 9 foot high, about 50 feet wide at the bottom and 1.5 miles long in the gully where the water ran through.

With the water storage problem solved, he cleared the mulga and coolabah trees from a 690 acre paddock, installed about 4 kilometres of 14" water pipe,  bought a 580 metre long travelling irrigator for $280,000 and sewed a certain type of beans for the Indian market. 
When he wants to irrigate he simply gravity fills the billabong that runs through his property from the dam and starts the diesel driven pumps to supply water to the irrigator.  Each irrigator uses 70 litres per second or 252,000 litres per hour and they set the irrigator to water the whole 690 acres in 24 hours.
As times were tough and the bank was constantly on his back, they were extremely happy when the bean crop took off and things finally started to look good.  As they were in the middle of a drought, this was the only green paddock for thousands of square miles around the area and it didn't take long for the kangaroos to find it.  They virtually destroyed the 690 acre crop in a week.  They had roo shooters come out and they shot over 1,000 roos in 3 nights, but they still couldn't save the crop.  He said the hardest part was having to go to tell the bank that they had lost the crop.  Not to be defeated, they then put a 7 wire electric fence around the paddock and sewed it with lucerne which finally turned out to be a huge success.  They get 8 cuts of lucerne a year off that paddock which worth over 1 million dollars.  They cut the lucerne at night in a V shape behind the irrigator as it is too hot to work during the day.
During the season they found they were too busy to keep the fuel up to the diesel pumps so their simple answer to this was to have the power company bring 3 phase power over 40 kilometres from Charleville.  I hate to imagine what the bank manager said about that.
They are now setting up their 5th travelling irrigator on the 5th 690 acre paddock to grow lucerne.
 I take my hat off to him for the true grit and determination to get this project up and running.
Now that there is water on the property, bird life is abundant.  Brolgas and Bustards have been seen there by the hundred along with sea eagles and a myriad of other birds.

A lot of the natural land is covered with mulga and coolabah trees.  The mulga trees can be pushed over in a drought and they become good fodder for the sheep and cattle.  Unfortunately they can only live on it for 9 months before it kills them.
Kevin said the saviour of the mulga is the buffel grass which the animals  eat with the mulga. This keeps them going 4 months longer in a drought.  Buffel grass is an introduced species which came to Australia with the Afghan Camel Drivers.  They used to pack their saddles with buffel grass seeds as it was soft to sit on.  When the saddles tore, the seeds escaped and took root around the camel trails, especially along the north west coast of Australia.  There are various opinions about the value of buffel grass as a fodder, but Kevin is still spreading it on his properties to keep his cattle alive during drought conditions. 
More information on buffel grass can be found at http://www.alicespringsdesertpark.com.au/kids/nature/plants/buffel.shtml

As the wool industry declined, Kevin has been changing his sheep over to Dorper's which are a meat strain of sheep that shed most of their own wool.  The workload is therefore a lot less as they can be shorn with just 3 strokes of the comb.  They run the rams with the ewes all the time to give them a constant stream of income from sale of fat lambs.

Feral goats are another source of income for station owners in the outback.  Once again Kevin has tried to go one better.  He now has 250 kilometres of electric fencing around his property to keep the goats in and the roos out.  He has introduced male Boar Goats with the feral goats and now producing good quality goats for the market in Charleville.  These goats are mainly sold to America.  

It's hard to believe how quickly things change out here.  This area was flooded again in 2011 which took out a lot of fences and roads, but now everywhere you go out here, they are all talking about drought again.  One farmer told me that they have only had 30 mils of rain out here since the flood of 2011.  The country is starting to look very dry.  Most farmers haven't joined the sheep or cattle for fear there won't be any feed or water.  There goes next years income.

The Evening Star Caravan Park has a husband and wife team who have lived and worked all their lives around this area.  Len plays a guitar and sings country songs while she cooks the evening meal in the camp ovens.  Camp oven lamb roast, spuds, pumpkin cauliflower in white sauce, baby carrots, beans and peas with gravy then hot damper with lashings of jam and cream for sweets for $15.00 per head around the camp fire, who could resist that?  Ymmm!!

About half way between Charleville and Longreach is the small town of Blackall which is famous for it's wool industry history. 

Blackall was home to a shearer named Jack Howe who holds the record for blade shearing 321 sheep in 7 hours and 40 minutes.  This record for blade shearing was set at "Alice Downs" station on October 10 1892 and has never been broken to this day. Within a few weeks, Jack set a new machine sheering record at "Barcaldine Downs" station of 237 sheep shorn in 8 hours.  Jack retired from shearing 1900 at the age of 39 and went into the hotel business owning 2 hotels in Blackall at different times.  In 1914, Jack ran a Ford car agency from the Universal Hotel selling many T Model fords into the Blackall area.



Blackall is also famous for having the only operating STEAM DRIVEN wool scouring plant which incorporates a shearing shed in Australia. This is an awesome piece of history that every visitor coming through this area should take the time to go and see.  Unfortunately the plant stopped operation in 1978 after 70 years when the wool industry went into decline and the plant was abandoned. 
17,000 volunteer man hours were put into restoring the old wool scour over a 12 year period and the plant became operational again as a tourist attraction in 2002

The plant is steam engine driven and even though the old steam boilers are completely burnt out, the plant still operates with its original single cylinder 45 horse power engine using steam from a diesel fired steam generator. 

Mill Bros 45 HP steam engine

This engine which was built in 1904, is one of only 2 Mill Brothers steam engines known to be left in the world.  The other one is used on an historic bridge in London to open and close a gate.  The London engine has been converted to run on compressed air, so the Blackall engine is THE ONLY MILL BROTHERS STEAM ENGINE IN THE WORLD known to be running on steam as it was originally designed.




20 stand shearing shed attached to the woolscour


The guided tour is absolutely fascinating and visitors can follow the wool process from the 20 stand elevated sheering shed, through the 3 stage scouring process, the rinsing process, the drying process and the pressing process where the wool is bailed and ready for export.  I loved it and for once Judy didn't have to listen to me whinge about the old steam engines rusting away. 




Woolscour machinery is fully operational
Unfortunately, the woolscour is facing hard times again and there has been talk of it closing again.  This would be an absolute disgrace on the face of the local council if this was allowed to happen after the huge effort that has been put in by volunteers to get it fully operational and try to fund it to keep it open.  Come on Blackall Tambo Regional Council, get your act together and fund this as it is not only an absolute piece of history but also one of the best tourist attractions your shire could have.



Blackall is also famous for the saying "Beyond The Black Stump" as well as "This Side Of The Black Stump" as this is where the Black Stump is located.  The Black Stump was used for surveying purposes and permanently marks the Astor Station which was established in 1887. Surveyors placed their transit on the stump for latitude and longitude observations as a stump was used rather than a set of legs to give more stability to the large transit that they were using. 


 At the time any country to the west of Blackall was considered to be "beyond the Black Stump" and therefore country to the east of Blackall was considered to be "this side of the Black Stump".

When staying in Blackall, it is advisable to leave the caravan hot water service turned off.  The town water supply comes from the Great Artesian Basin and the cold tap runs between 58o C and 62oC so to have a shower you use the cold water tap and then feed in cold water from the hot water storage to cool the cold water down to a usable temperature.

Our travels continued on to "the other side of the black stump" and we arrived at Longreach where all of a sudden we find ourselves 2015 kilometres from Geelong.  This is as far as we will be travelling north west on this trip as we need to be back in Melbourne by the end of October.  
Here we are in the middle of August and the whole week that we have been here it has been over 32 degrees.

Longreach has a lot of wonderful attractions and events that outline the history on outback Queensland.  We decided to do the Kinnon and Co experience as it offers a Cobb and Co style stage coach ride at full gallop.
The day started at 9.00 am with damper covered with lashings of jam and cream, all washed down with a big pot of tea or coffee.  We were given a quick briefing on the dangers of stage coach travel and had a chance to have a look around the coaches before boarding. I was glad to see that the wheels were all fitted with hydraulic disk brakes behind the old wooden chocks that used to rub on the wheels for brakes back in the early days.



The stage coach drawn by a team of 4 horses, took us down the main street and out onto the town common along the old road that was the original south entry into Longreach that the stage coaches used to take.  We soon saw how coach travel used to be as the dust and smell of sweating horses filled the coach.  


True to their word, they took the horses up to full gallop on the dusty road around the common for about 200 metres.  At a top speed of 48 kilometres per hour, I was glad we didn't get the seats outside on top of the coach and that modern day coaches have air bag suspension.
The coach driver gave an excellent commentary on how Cobb and Co used to run their coaches.  Their drivers were only permitted to bring their horses to a gallop if there was danger of a storm hitting which would keep them from reaching their destination on time, and then only for 500 yards at a time before bringing the horses back to a normal pace for 10 minutes to let them cool down.
From the drivers commentary we could tell that Cobb and Co. really looked after their horses and passengers.  Perhaps that is why they were so successful in Australia for so many years.
Cobb and Co. were also the first passenger company in the world to introduce a customer travel pack.  This pack consisted of some very tightly wound fibre about the diameter of a 10 cent piece and about 12 mm thick.  When this little pack was soaked in water for a few seconds, it opened out into a piece of cotton material which passengers used to cover their noses to stop the dust.  It could also be used to wipe the sweat from your brow and was also very handy if you had to go to the toilet at one of the bush stops.   We all thought that Kentucky Fried Chicken were the first to introduce moistened soft towels in the late 60's.  Qantas also say that they were first to introduce passenger travel packs, but Cobb and Co were doing it well before commercial air travel.
Click here for more interesting facts on Cobb and Co

On arrival back at the Kinnon and Co courtyard, we were treated to  a screening of the outback movie called "Smiley Gets A Gun".  This movie has relevance as it was made at Muttaburra which is a small town about 110 kilometres east of Longreach.

Following the movie, Kinnon and Co put on an old fashioned "Tent Show" which told the story in a rather comedic style about Captain Starlight who is a bit of a folk hero around here.  Short story is that he stole 1,200 head of cattle from a station in this area and drove them all the way to Adelaide.
The fact that he was a cattle thief doesn't detract from the story, but the fact that he had the skills to drive those cattle all the way from Longreach to almost Adelaide through some of Australia's biggest outback is what made him into a hero.

This experience also offers a cruise down the Thompson River at sunset on a paddle wheeler.  We were picked up in the evening by coach (with air suspension) and taken out to the river on the edge of town.  





We traveled about half an hour downstream  and then back upstream again to see the sunset in the west. 


As night fell we gathered around the campfire and were treated to a hearty beef stew followed by apricot danish with cream and custard.  Oh, that reminds me, we will need to do an extra couple of laps on the push bikes in the morning.  A bush poet told some wonderful outback poems with only some interruptions from a stockman riding a rooster drawn carriage.
After dinner we moved to their open air theater on the river bank to watch the sound and light show which once again told the Captain Starlight story in spectacular fashion.
We have heard the Captain Starlight story told on 3 different occasions now, and all have a slightly different lean on the story.  Apparently, it depends a lot on whose ancestors you hear the story from.
For more on the Captain Starlight Story click here
Kinnon and Co is a "mum and dad" run outfit which include the whole family.  They have had to diversify from their farming enterprises to keep the family a float during tough farming conditions. 
They told us that 1.4 million head of cattle have passed through Longreach since  last Christmas either by rail or road train, as farmers from all over central and far north Queensland as well as the Northern Territory off load cattle to save feeding them during the current drought.
They are absolutely passionate about outback Queensland and also the Australian way of life.
Click here for more information on Kinnon and Co. http://www.kinnonandco.com.au/OurExperiences


The Stockmans Hall of Fame is the iconic attraction of Longreach.  The museum is set in this wonderful purpose built building which covers 3 different levels.  This part of this attraction left us a little bit cold as a lot of the displays weren't working as designed, but  folk who have ancestors associated with outback stockman and properties would find it fascinating to research some of their history.
The building also houses outback artwork done by John Morrison.  John followed the track that Captain Starlight took with his stolen cattle and did a series of oil paintings along the route.  These painting were then animated and used in the sound and light show that we saw on the river.






The saving grace of the Hall of Fame visit was the live show and dinner that they put on in the afternoon and evening.
Lachie Cosser from Yackandandah in Victoria, along with his wife and 3 daughters do a half hour night show at the Cattlemen's Bar and Grill and also a 1 hour day show at the Outback Centre.






The evening show is in a larger arena so the wife and 3 daughters aged 9, 14 and 15 do an excellent riding display with the horses while Lachie does some clever acts with his horse  and a lovely old bull. 




The day show had some similar acts but also included his dogs, some piglets and sheep.  Both shows were very entertaining.









Longreach is also home to the Qantas Founders Museum which isn't terribly hard to find as there is a complete 747 jet parked there, almost right on the edge of the highway.  We didn't visit this museum as our trip to the USA earlier this year just about cured us of aeroplanes.  I couldn't help snapping off a couple of pics as it is not everyday you can get quite so close to a 747. 



Judy has roast chicken on for dinner this evening so we might go and make the most of the spa here at the Longreach Tourist Park while we wait for it to cook.
The next part of our travels will take us east from "beyond the black stump" with various stops between here and Toowoomba and then starting to head south down the east coast.

Great Artesian Basin


The Great Artesian Basin (GAB) is one of the largest artesian groundwater basins in the world and underlies approximately one-fifth of Australia extending beneath regions of Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia and the Northern Territory.

The Basin covers a total area of over 1, 711,000 square km and it has an estimated total water storage of 64,900 million megalitres (a megalitre is one million litres and is equivalent to about half the water in an Olympic swimming pool).

The Great Artesian Basin was formed between 100 and 250 million years ago and consists of alternating layers of water bearing (permeable) sandstone aquifers and non-water bearing (impermeable) siltstones and mudstones.

Natural discharge occurs mainly from mound springs in the south-western area.  Mound springs are natural outlets of the artesian aquifers from which groundwater flows to the surface.

Dating of the artesian waters has given ages of almost 2 million years for the oldest waters, which occur in the south-western area of the Basin.

History

The inland of Australia is traversed by streams but these rarely flow and have few permanent waterholes. Unpredictable rainfall and high evaporation meant that early dams and earth tanks built to service the growing population and pastoral industry were unreliable.

Prior to European settlement, Aborigines used the mound springs of the Great Artesian Basin. Some of these mound springs feature in Aboriginal myths and hold significant spiritual and cultural beliefs of indigenous communities. Mound springs were and still are a valuable resource for the support of wildlife.

Europeans first discovered the artesian groundwater in 1878 when a shallow bore sunk near Bourke in New South Wales produced flowing water.  ln 1885 the Queensland Government Geologist decided to drill a deep bore at Blackall, however, before completion of this bore, the first artesian flow in Queensland was obtained near Cunnamulla in 1887. Later that year Barcaldine became the first town with artesian water.

The number of bores drilled in Queensland increased from 34 to 524 in the ten year period from 1889 to 1899. By 1915 over 1,500 flowing artesian bores had been drilled throughout the Basin.

Thousands of kilometres of bore drains were excavated to distribute water around properties, thus allowing sheep and cattle to be raised on the vast Mitchell grass, mulga and Spinifex plains. Bore drains are small, open channels that can extend 100km or more.

The water from the Great Artesian Basin continues to be of vital importance to outback regions of Queensland, New South Wales and South Australia. This water is often the only available supply for towns and properties for their domestic and stock watering requirements.


The GAB also supplies water for minor irrigation works, key mining and extractive industries, the petroleum industry, an emerging tourism industry and limited industrial purposes.

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Cobb and Co Points of Interest


Cobb & Co. operated for more than 70 years in Australia.
Coach travel was very expensive, about £2  for a one day journey in 1850. Today this would be about $400.
Cobb & Co. would harness up to 6000 horses every day with 40,000 in work at any one time.
Feeding these horses required approximately 33 ton (30 tonne) of corn and oats every day.
Cobb & Co. coaches traveled at an average speed of 7 miles (12 klms) per hour.
Cobb & Co. coaches covered about 50 miles (80 klms) in a day.
Every Cobb & Co. horse had its own made-to-measure collar and set of harness that was kept in immaculate condition by the grooms.
The thoroughbrace is the name given to the strips of leather that form the suspension on a Cobb & Co. coach. It took nine bullocks hides to make a pair of thoroughbraces for the coach. When thoroughbraces stretched through constant wear it could be tightened simply by turning a turn buckle.
Candle lamps were used on coaches when they had to travel into the night. Toward the end of the coaching era, large carbide lights often replaced the candle lamps.
Canvas blinds on each window- could be rolled down to protect the passengers from the weather.
The box seat was the name given to the space beside the driver as it was a seat on top of a storage box.
Women were never allowed to sit up front with the driver.
Cobb & Co. coach drivers would sound a bugle when they were about a mile away from a change station to let the groom and people know of their arrival.
Cobb & Co. coaches always had a pick up point at the Post Office in each town.
Cobb & Co. coaches carried passengers, mail and luggage.
Passengers were allowed to have only 14lbs (6kg) of luggage per person.
Luggage was roped on the roof and at the back of the coach, as well as stored under the passenger's feet.
Mail parcels were transported in large wicker baskets on the roof of the coach.
 Cobb & Co. wrapped the mail in sealed waterproof bags to prevent damage to the mail in even the wettest conditions.
Cobb & Co. drivers soon became well know for their reliability in getting the mail through to its destination, even through flood and fire.
On flooded rivers, the coach, the mail and the passengers would be ferried to the other side whilst the horses would swim across.
On very steep sections of road, passengers had to get out and walk beside the coach.
People inside the coach often became seasick due to the rocking motion of the coach.
Changing stations would provide a cup of tea and scones for the passengers or even a complete meal and overnight stay.
Cobb & Co. stables were often found beside country hotels.
Cobb & Co. built a coach building factory in Charleville Queensland, which built many different types of horse-drawn vehicles.
Henry Lawson wrote a famous poem called "The Lights of Cobb & Co."
Cobb & Co. ceased operating in 1929 five years after horse-drawn coaches were last used
Before his death, James Rutherford had ordered three motor vehicles to replace coaches on some routes.
By the time the coaches ceased operating QANTAS was carrying mail by air.

Cobb and Co coaches operated in America, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa

The Captain Starlight Story


Mention the name Harry Readford in Longreach and you're sure to be greeted with tales from local residents that have been handed down from their parents and grandparents. During the last 120 years, this man has become something of a local legend. But whether he be Redford or Readford, to local residents he has come to be more popularly known as Captain Starlight - a fictitious name drawn from Rolfe Boldrewood's Australian classic, "Robbery Under Arms". Boldrewood based his central character, Captain Starlight upon a combination of bushrangers of that period, as well as the renowned cattle-duffer, Harry Readford. He became part of the outback folklore when in 1870, in the company of two others, he set out from Bowen Downs (refer Longreach - Early Beginnings) with about 1000 head of stolen cattle. The cattle were overlanded through largely unexplored country, travelling along the Barcoo River and Cooper Creek as well as the Strzelecki Track into South Australia. The mob included a white bull which was to prove something of a problem for Readford. He sold it at Hill Hill Station in South Australia so that he could purchase supplies from the station store. The bull was later shipped back to Queensland as evidence against Readford at his trial. From Hill Hill Station Readford continued on to Blanchwater Station where he decided to sell the entire herd. The group moved south to Adelaide from where Readford made his way back to the Eastern States.  As to the whereabouts of his two companions, this is still unknown. Not long after his return to the east, Readford faced charges of cattle stealing and the trial was held at Roma in Queensland. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty, thus ending one of the most daring escapades in recent history. Readford's most famous legacy in the Longreach district is Starlight's Lookout also known as Cassidy Knob. On this hill which rises gently over the surrounding plains, Readford is purported to have placed a man to keep watch while they were gathering the Bowen Downs cattle together for their epic journey.