Owned now by Australia's second richest mining magnate, there is no shortage of coin for the improvements. Thankfully, they got rid of the sheep. Now, a food basket. Best melon I've ever had came from there.
@Mgtowaussie12 күн бұрын
Used to do this💪
@nigelmorgan344920 күн бұрын
He must be a good boss and then you enjoy your work
@carlosvera3101Ай бұрын
GOD bleesyou
@richardbaker2701Ай бұрын
This is the most Australian thing I’ve ever seen
@MyFamilyGatheringАй бұрын
What an excellent Video. Absolutely educational. Just an excellent program to view , learn, and appreciate humanity on a cattle station. So absorbing. Thankyou for allowing this to be shared to us . Thankyou.
@DianneERyder-ic9yj2 ай бұрын
Apologies - spelling mishap - ‘fence line’ NOT ‘decline’ meant on line 14 👍
@DianneERyder-ic9yj2 ай бұрын
Our grandmothers brother lived, worked and breathed Brickhouse Station from approx 1954 age 21 yrs to 2003 aged 70yrs. I have treasured memories of our parents taking us kids on regular visits with him throughout the 1970’s-1980”s. He lived in the single men’s quarters next to the main homestead, kept an orange, mandarine and lemon orchard, free ranging chooks and fowls (best fresh eggs) kept a big coffee tin full of loose change he’d store (he’d alway give us few bob for lollies when we left), always had his radio going listening to TAB races or football games, we'd tag along on decline and windmill runs in his little Suzuki, looking for emu eggs, bush tucker, shoot a roo, enjoy dinner outs, follow one of the geothermal hot spring ‘canal’s’ that ran Southwest direction through station property to Callagidee Rd - crossing North West Coastal highway toward the sea at Bush Bay (this was ALWAYS full and provided a continuous supply of water for livestock and native flora and fauna alike!) Always with his beautiful border collies - his best mates and companions - they were loyal to him alone and accompanied him everywhere he went. Was known to go out to hunt & shoot wild dogs that threatened and killed livestock from time to time - hanging them on boundary fence along Gascoyne Junction road cattle grid as warning to townspeople to keep their pets from straying! He knew that place blindfolded. Never married or had kids of his own. A true bush gentleman, football player, and pastoral station legend! Men of his ilk in this day & age - One In A Million 🙏🏽♥️
@rmwilliamsoutbackmagazine29 күн бұрын
Hi Dianne, we are interested in hearing more of your story, can you email your details to us in the next week or so?
@clarebighi65912 ай бұрын
Hey guys! Wondering if anyone knows of a Christian jackeroo/jillaro school?? 🦘🌄🏜️🤠
@tonylakis61072 ай бұрын
Amazing leadership
@timburary3 ай бұрын
Real Australian's, real Australia 🇦🇺
@michellefung18apr835 ай бұрын
Amazing! LOVE this location.
@FNBADVENTURES_FNB5 ай бұрын
I built rebuilt the boundary fence back when Andrew forrest bought the station and More flies than a jar full of sugar
@tommygola5 ай бұрын
"It doesn't matter what position you are in the team, we're all doing out bit" Never a truer word, love that.
@allandrennan49165 ай бұрын
Excellent stuff.
@borischandan885818 күн бұрын
Have you tried the trading?
@tinxho.6 ай бұрын
im currently saving up money to be able to move to Australia and learn these skiils, i truly hope one day i could be part of an operation like this. love from Spain:)
@Rich-ms6te3 ай бұрын
Great . good luck
@RhondaArmstrong-y3y6 ай бұрын
Amazing story , true Aussies working hard on the land glad to watch this . I have visited family in Hay NSW on a sheep 🐑 farm and seen what hard work it is to work on the land in Australia 🇦🇺. It is wonderful to see family all working together. Cheers Camp family love your story
@marcuslove54316 ай бұрын
How could I apply for work would love the opportunity to do this
@Florida2397 ай бұрын
Do y’all not rope cattle on while horseback ? I noticed there wasn’t any horns on y’all’s saddles
@ShaneJohnson-r7w7 ай бұрын
Hey my great uncle did this fence before you guys he wrote a book
@michaelfoort25928 ай бұрын
Leadership that oozes quality, humanity and caring
@JenE33778 ай бұрын
Beautiful fat cattle.
@JoaoPires-pd9ot8 ай бұрын
Oi 👍👍👍👍👍💯💯💯
@JoaoPires-pd9ot8 ай бұрын
Oi 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@lisatopham42498 ай бұрын
Beautiful country ,keep on Traken
@alisonshanahan12378 ай бұрын
Excellent opportunity for young people to grow and develop their skills.
@lisatopham42498 ай бұрын
Very interesting ,beautiful stock horses ,what a gorgous country .thanks for this good luck !
@fishnchips81329 ай бұрын
Impressed. Remember the cattle export ban vividly - your response is to your credit & your rewards hard won, but you're the sort of people needed in the industry & the industry is better for you.
@MrBlocky009 ай бұрын
No surfing 😂
@discodags689 ай бұрын
i never been on a property in over 30 year or ridden a horse either in that time i use to break them aswell in the late 70, 80s
@edgarkyeyune77299 ай бұрын
❤ this. 🐿️🌨️🍃
@nmelkhunter110 ай бұрын
I grew up a ranch kid in New Mexico and I wish my AG cousins in Australia all the best. Maybe one day I’ll visit Australia and shake your hands. Here’s to your health. 🍻
@lukevandeleur709510 ай бұрын
Great video Woody and team 👌🏼
@adrianjos0410 ай бұрын
There was only a handful of backyard operators in Indo that were handling cattle inhumanly..........the rest were operating properly. Four Corners knew this, but failed to tell the whole story.
@rankoutsider197711 ай бұрын
Tequila! Ariba Hombres ❤
@loricharpentier165411 ай бұрын
That's a lot of work! Hope no one gets hurt...
@rob-zz5pp11 ай бұрын
this is great to see like it lot congratulation on hard work rob.
@caseyhansen456711 ай бұрын
Nice video.good photography tough living
@caseyhansen456711 ай бұрын
Graey video ,hope for more videos of outback stations please
@bg58811 ай бұрын
Where are the aboriginal workers?
@Jyden_Carmody11 ай бұрын
Not there
@tony.benfield849910 ай бұрын
If you’ve been to Wave Hill, you’d have an idea. I you watched this video in its entirety you’d have an even better idea.
@meganh7319 ай бұрын
I agree they are the best horseman
@Brigalow018 ай бұрын
The ole black fellas get kicked to the curb as usual
@Paulo66011 ай бұрын
Great video, very well produced and presented.
@jodeofoz11 ай бұрын
Awesome
@johnenglish179811 ай бұрын
what a lovely family and life in the outback 14:23
@pb9040 Жыл бұрын
Well done kalyeeda stn, well said , boxed beef i believe, atleast the slaughter process is here , is done correctly, one should expect , stress free !!!
@V8RangeRoversGoingNutts Жыл бұрын
That’s really impressive. Respect!!
@trentfrancis4646 Жыл бұрын
I remember going over to Killarney station many years ago when the Tapp family where still there. They held a horse sale and camp draft on the station, must have been around the time when Elders rural where selling the place as it had gone into receivership. I was working down the road at Humbert river station. The life in a stock camp teaches you that hard work won't kill you. I guess we worked on average 15 to 16 hours every day from Monday to Sunday. We would spend 4 months at a time in camp lived under a tree in a swag with a bag full of work clothes and nothing else. The head stockman was paid $400 a week , could you imagine Gen X and Y doing these hours for this sort of money.