Sam Bailey, having grown up on a farm at Croppa Creek in North West NSW, was a 19-year-old jackaroo in 1987 on Avon Downs on the Barkly Tableland, NT.
He went into the Camooweal Pub one Sunday afternoon with three mates.
Twenty minutes into the trip, he became a quadriplegic as a result of a car crash.
He was told to get an office job in one of the nearby towns. Instead, he travelled the world, made disability-friendly adjustments to his family's farm equipment and learnt to fly lightweight aircraft.
He has also launched Helifirst, Sam's dream of becoming the first quadriplegic in the world to fly a helicopter, then fly into schools to inspire children to fulfil their own dreams.
Sam’s personal journey, with his wife Jenny, is a testament to overcoming adversity and reaching for the skies, offering invaluable insights to young leaders in the agriculture sector.
ABC Interview (10 March 2024)
When Ken Faulkner was growing up in rural Queensland, he saw horses as tools for farm work, using them to muster and get around the station.
But his very pragmatic view of these enigmatic creatures changed when Ken got his very own horse called Sascha, and 'started' her from scratch.
Sascha helped Ken develop his own style of horsemanship, and in the process Ken's attitude toward himself also changed, as he edged closer and closer to the man he always wanted to be.
Since then, Ken has become so respected for how he transforms horses and their riders, that people travel from all over the world to learn from him.
After a terrible accident on one of his favourite horses, Smoke, Ken had to learn to walk and ride again, and at the same time he discovered himself all over again.
Further information
You can learn more about Ken Faulkner's unique style of horsemanship here .
As a lifelong passionate advocate for, and expert in, the rural sector Mary O’Brien couldn’t stand by and accept the shockingly high rates of depression and suicide amongst men in rural areas. Her charity 'Are You Bogged Mate?’ leads the way in providing tailored help to country blokes that saves countless lives and families.
CLICK HERE TO PLAY Nigel Marsh speaking with Mary O'Brien from 'Are You Bogged Mate?'
‘In that instant I knew I needed to become a cowboy’
Roland Breckwoldt, agricultural and environmental advisor, one of Australia’s most respected horsemen, author of 'The New Ringer'.
Roland Breckwoldt was working as a lab technician in Sydney when he heard about the chance to move to a remote cattle station in Queensland to become a stockman.
He had no experience on a station and none of the skills needed for the job.
But, everything inside him told him he, “just had to go”. LISTEN NOW
Roland Breckwoldt | The New Ringer
Campbell Costello's work as a vet has taken him out of his family's station in North Queensland to places as far flung as Kazakhstan, Mongolia and Patagonia.
He's acted as the official vet for a sled race in Alaska, for epic horse races in Mongolia and Argentina, and he has run a cattle station in the former Soviet Union.
But after a family tragedy, Dr Costello got his pilot's licence so he could service Australian communities and stations in the country's most remote corners. LISTEN NOW
Lach McClymont started a contract mustering business when he was just 23. Having grown up on a sheep property near Goondiwindi, he always knew he wanted to work on the land.
Lach learnt the ropes by working as a ringer everywhere from the Kimberley to Cape York, to Victoria; always looking to learn from older hands, and with his eyes on a very big prize.
Flying over the Territory one day, Lach saw huge numbers of cattle roaming wild on traditionally-owned land near the Queensland border. He learned the cattle hadn’t been handled in 30 years.
In 2018, Lach and a small team, in conjunction with the local owners, mounted a complex operation to muster those cattle. They spent three intense months working mostly at night, bull-catching in rough, rocky, and pristine terrain. LISTEN NOW
"From the helicopter I could see the property's waterholes surrounded by paperbark trees, its red-stone cliffs lit by the rising sun. And grass, endless seas of grass. Here was the vision splendid: Nat Buchanan's grass castle. Gurindji country. And my country, Australia."
This is big country, the outback, home to the largest cattle and sheep stations in the world. Yet as these properties are closed to visitors, few of us know what goes on behind the farm gate. So what's life really like when next door is 500 kilometres away, and mustering livestock in their tens of thousands, backbreaking physical labour, and dealing with extreme heat and long hours is all in a day's work? And why would these tough stockmen and women not have it any other way?
You will need an AUDIBLE account to listen to this audiobook: https://www.audible.com.au/pd/Outback-Stations-Audiobook/B00FN1TL3I
This book is an inspiring tribute to the remarkable life of Sir Sidney Kidman - the Cattle King. At the age of 13 Sidney Kidman ran away from home with only five shillings in his pocket. He went on to become a horse dealer, drover, cattle buyer and bush jockey and he also ran a coach business. Above all Kidman created a mighty cattle empire of more than a hundred stations, fighting droughts, bushfires, floods and plagues of vermin to do so. His enterprise and courage won him a huge fortune and made him a legend.
You will need an AUDIBLE account to listen to this audiobook: https://www.audible.com.au/pd/The-Cattle-King-Audiobook/B00FMMDHEC
Sally Warriner went from a hippie backpacking across Europe, to living on remote cattle stations in Western Australia and the Northern Territory in the blink of an eye.
Twenty years later, though, in the middle of the night, she abandoned ship.
After two decades being called - and calling herself - the wife of the general manager, it was hard for Sally to redefine herself.
She went back to nursing, finding new adventures in places like Sierra Leone, Sudan and Bhutan. LISTEN NOW
Susan's lived and worked in the remote Kimberley region for more than thirty-five years and says she may never leave.
She and her husband established a Flying Veterinary Service in Kununurra which they ran for many years. They then developed two of the most significant cattle stations in Australia's north.
Susan's abiding love for the land and people of the Kimberley inform her work to sponsor the education of Indigenous youth, and protect the Kimberley's ancient rock galleries.
Bill was massive. He had power, intelligence, and unmatched courage. In performance and character he stood above all the other 200,000 Australian horses sent to the Middle East in the Great War. But as war horses go he had one serious problem. No one could ride him but one man - Major Michael Shanahan. Some even thought Bill took a sneering pleasure in watching would-be riders hit the dust.
You will need an AUDIBLE account to listen to this audiobook: https://www.audible.com.au/pd/Bill-the-Bastard-Audiobook/B00FO6HVTS
'The Flying Vet' features David Bradley and his wife Susan, who operated the biggest veterinary practice in the world, flying a tiny Cessna out of Kununurra to cattle stations across northern Australia. David was at the forefront of TB eradication from cattle in the Top End...
David Bradley 'The Flying Vet'
'Sarawak Stock Take' from 1985, featuring the Rosewood Stockcamp and the first live exports to Malaysia - both include stunning aerial footage, including Bullo River Station, Newcastle Waters and Rockhampton Downs...
This book is hard to put down, particularly for anyone who wants to work on a station or has worked on one, this is a must read.
In the Middle of Nowhere is a story of beating the odds, of the power of love and the strength of family ties to overcome every obstacle.
Terry met John at St Vincents Hospital, where she was training to be a nurse and he was recuperating from a horse-riding accident. They wrote love letters to each other for five years before marrying. Terry's new home on the huge pastoral lease of Riveren consisted of a tent and a newly drilled bore. The newlyweds literally built their station from scratch, raising and educating their four children on the station.
It is a story told with warmth and a knowledge of the bush, its people, and the issues facing the Northern Territory of Australia.
BOOK AVAILABLE HERE OR order locally online from THE BOOKSHOP in Darwin
Here, also, is an audio interview Terry did with the ABC Terry 2010 .
For more than three decades, Harry has been taking boatloads of people into the wild rivers of the Northern Territory.
Gigantic saltwater crocodiles follow his boat as it cruises down the Adelaide River, waiting to leap out of the water to snatch a piece of buffalo meat that Harry extends to them on a stick.
One of the largest crocs is named Brutus. Harry calls him his 'business partner'.
Some years ago, Harry was called on to save Brutus' life, which required him to extract a long, thick tendril of African vine directly from the croc's mouth. VIEW NOW
Neil McDonald has spent more than thirty years as one of the country’s leading working dog trainers.He believes a blend of discipline and love, or 'head and heart' is needed to raise a champion working dog.
It took a very serious farm accident for cattle expert Joni Hall to learn how important good quality working dogs are.
She now lives a nomadic life, travelling rural and remote Australia in a van, with her 20 canine colleagues.
Both Neil and Joni star in the ABC's reality show Muster Dogs. LISTEN NOW
Over his long and successful career Rick has nursed countless animals, employed over 400 veterinarians in his vet clinics and established tourism services across Western Australia, but his fondest memories are of his four-legged-friends he met along the way.
The outback vet with stories of treating racehorses, camels and the odd chimp as he zigzagged around the Pilbara from the 1970s onwards, and how he came to meet the legendary red kelpie. LISTEN NOW
Judy grew up on a farm in north east Victoria. When she was seventeen, a family tragedy saw her thrust into life as a farmer for the first time.
Being a young farmer led her into local politics, and eventually into a burgeoning friendship with a lanky, much-loved local politician named Tim Fischer.
On their first date, Tim took Judy to the Tocumwal Debutant Ball, and it was a disaster.
He struggled with his schoolwork, and was often caned by his teachers.
As an adult, Bernie went to the Northern Territory to become a jackaroo.
While working on vast cattle properties, he picked up skills as a tracker from some of his Aboriginal co-workers.
Later, Bernie got into youth work, and today he runs a youth service in Armidale, Northern NSW.
At BackTrack Youthworks Bernie welcomes kids who are a bit like his former self. He meets teenagers falling into a life of petty crime, and sometimes incarceration.
As soon as they show up, they're given full responsibility for a working dog.
The relationship with a dog is just part of Bernie's program, all of which is designed to draw out tenderness, responsibility and confidence in teenagers who've been struggling with feelings of worthlessness.
Since it began in 2006 BackTrack has helped more than 1000 teenagers see a different future.
Stuart Austin is fast becoming an expert and well respected advocate of building soil carbon, as well as a well known practitioner of regenerative farming on the collection of Wilmot Cattle Co properties.
Podcaster, Charlie Arnott, caught up with Stuart to delve into his journey from farm boy in southern NSW, ringer from the top end of Australia, recruiter of ranch hands in Canada, to general manager of the Wilmot Cattle Company in NSW.
Now this podcast recommendation is a bit left field in that it is not rural related, but this is one ripping yarn - and it's all true. Every episode just gets better and better (and more incredulous), it will also make you rethink who you do your banking with!
Dan Saunders is no criminal mastermind, he’s a normal Aussie bloke who used to work at Nando’s in country Victoria. He happened to come across a Glitch on his NAB ATM card. Over the space of 4 months, he was able to withdraw $1.6 million dollars and blew it on designer clothes, girls, private jets and giving money away to not only his mates but complete strangers, like a modern-day Robin Hood.
I've just added this book to my reading list as the recommendation comes from a trusted source (thank you Tamy) who says Nemarluk is her Dad's favourite yarn... and I'm hoping it will come out as an audio book soon - which I will link to when it does.
Nemarluk , one of the most feared Aboriginal renegades in the north of Australia, had vowed to rid his land of all intruders. This is the story of the last few years of his life, and his battles with the Northern Territory Police and their tracker Bul-Bul.
Ion Idriess (1889—1979) is one of Australia's best-loved writers, with fifty-six books to his credit and millions of copies sold. When he returned from the First World War he wrote The Desert Column , about his experiences with the 5th Light Horse. Prospecting for Gold was his first major successful work; it immediately sold out and was reprinted constantly in the following years, as were many of his books.
Idriess spent much of his life travelling throughout Australia, collecting material for his true-life stories, including Flynn of the Inland, The Red Chief and Nemarluk . He was awarded the O.B.E. in 1968 for his contribution to Australian literature.
Real, raw, and unbelievable stories of motherhood told by women on the land.
Join Stephanie Trethewey each week as she dives deep into rural motherhood with frank and unfiltered conversations with rural mums from across the country.
Tune in and find out what’s it like raising kids on the land.
When Noel Buntine first arrived in the Northern Territory in 1950, he was told he was not qualified to hold a responsible government position … but that didn’t stop him pioneering road transport of livestock in the Top End and the Kimberley, long before there were roads … and, with persistence and determination, went on to build a multi-million dollar trucking empire that traversed more than half of the continent, from Geraldton in Western Australia across to Queensland and New South Wales. The success of his business was based on trust, integrity and down-to-earth loyal drivers and support staff.
Camille McClymont’s life in Western Australia’s Kimberly region is well reflected in her Instagram posts, (@thecattlemandaughter); the red dust, the blazing sunsets and the days of mustering, the 31-year-old gives a little snapshot into her days spent managing her family’s property, Kalyeeda Station.
In this episode Camille gives an insight into life managing 10,000 head of cattle spread across 122,000 hectares, during some of the most extreme weather Mother Nature has thrown at them in recent history. She also gives a heart wrenching, yet deeply insightful look into her idyllic childhood preceding a series of devastating twists of fate in her early teens that marked the beginning of a life-threatening eating disorder. This is a story about family, commitment, love and most of all, a truly wondrous sense of belonging.
Camille, Lach and baby Jack McClymont at Kalyeeda Station, WA
"The horses are hell west and crooked - it'll take a week to muster them." In this remarkable autobiographical account, Tom Cole 'the real Crocodile Dundee' tells the stories of his life in the outback during the 1920s and 1930s. With great humour and drama, he recounts his adventures as a drover and station hand in the toughest country in Australia and later on as a buffalo shooter and crocodile hunter in the Northern territory before the war.
Personally I think this book is an Australian Classic!
Hell Western Crooked by Tom Cole
From growing up with a rural background to nursing in remote areas, Rebecca Crozier shares the memories on how she has ended up working and living on Nerrima Station neighbouring the Fitzroy River in the West Kimberley. Back and forth between nursing and nature, Bec's small stint at the Fitzroy health centre turned into a long term commitment. Partner Chris, Manager at Nerrima, along with daughter 4 year old Georgina are the hard working couple that get to improve the herd and live within a community that are grateful to have Bec not far away to assist in the healthcare system in the surrounding communities.
Angie Nisbet speaks to Bec on her podcast 'Married to the Land' .
Bec with colleagues Deb Nicholson & Lizzie Curtis at Looma Clinic in 2018
Having stayed at the Larrimah pub with a mate, the place holds a certain amount of mystery and intrigue. It's miles from anywhere, so if you want to make someone disappear without a trace then this the place to do it!
An outback town, a missing man and 11 people who mostly hate each other. Kylie Stevenson
and Caroline Graham get Lost in Larrimah, it's a podcast you'll find hard not to 'chain smoke' episode after episode.
LISTEN NOW ON SPOTIFY or view the ABC Documentary on youtube [55min]: The disappearance of Paddy Moriarty.
This is a good laugh - from 'Foot Falcon's', 'Reg Grundies', 'Head like a sucked mango' to 'Noah Arks' and 'Bag of Fruit' - McInnes has some great yarns and background stories behind many Aussie favourites... including one of the all time best nicknames 'The Pharaoh'.
William McInnes is a much-loved Australian actor and an author, whose books often recall his childhood in Queensland.
It was there, in Redcliffe, that William became fluent in the peculiar, funny and colourful words and phrases unique to Australian English.
Over the years, he's continued to collect them to celebrate how much they say about who we really are.
Yeah Nah: A celebration of life and the words that make us who we are is published by Hatchette
William McInnes and his favourite Australianisms
From her family property in remote north-west New South Wales, vet Ameliah Scott flies to work in her beloved Piper Arrow.
From bulls who need castrating and cows in need of pregnancy check-ups, to snappy cockatoos who won't let her get close - these animals and their owners all rely on Ameliah.
Her concern for animals began when she was growing up in the midst of drought.
Just like her father and grandfather, Ameliah learned to fly so she could cover the vast distances of her outback home and get to where she was needed most.
Vet Ameliah Scott flies to work in her beloved Piper Arrow.
His buckle collection and trophy cabinet exceeds more than most ever will. However, the focus of this next conversation is more on the person than the victories. Ben Hall comes from a very well known Campdafting Family but Cattle Droving runs thick in his veins too. Some of the greatest that industry has seen.
I'd heard his name, we'd interviewed his wife and I'd read a lot about him. But, before this interview I'd never actually met Ben.
I was pleasantly surprised how comfortable Ben was having this conversation with me.
He sat kicked back in the seat with a beer in his hand, a smirk on his face and cheek in his eye. We laughed, he shared some great advice and there was a glimpse of emotion. He took host Caitlyn Hewitt on a journey she never expected.
Other conversations on this podcast include Troy Dunn, Ben Hunt and Brett Pechey.
LISTEN TO PODCAST via From The Saddle website (May 2022)
Ben Reardon was the Head Stockman at Kamilaroi Station, one of Stanbroke's 7 station's in far north Queensland. Each year, prior to a new season commencing Ben sent his new charges a few word's of wisdom which he has developed over the years from his experiences on several cattle stations: VIEW LIST
At the end of Mustering Season 2022, Ben departed Stanbroke, at age 22, and returned home to help his Mum and Dad on the family farm near Kyogle in Northern NSW.
Tragically in February 2023 his Dad took his own life at age 52... Ben and his family had to somehow bounce back...
You can listen to Sam Fryer's interview with Ben in October 2023 on his podcast 'A Place to Call Home'
Another podcast a bit off topic but there are some gem's here...
Gripping stories told by people who witnessed history first-hand.
Hear what it was like to be a police sniper tasked with handling the gunman at the Port Arthur massacre; how it felt to be a teenager seeing The Beatles during their record-breaking 1964 Adelaide visit; and how one man survived being trapped 1km underground for 14 days, after the Beaconsfield mine collapse.
Bouta has been one of the hardest blokes for Mary to pin down for a chat.
A Legend of the top end, from Tipperary station, Bouta has been at the top of Mary's list of guests since day 1.
Just so happened he was doing a run for the station down to Roma while Mary was headed out to Boulia and she got him away from the truck for 45 minutes at the Winton Roadhouse.
And just in time too... before he buys up in Byron and becomes best mates with the Hemsworths given his starring role in the Netflix series 'Territory'