QUEENSLAND DROUGHT
VIVID PEN PICTURES. , . SYDNEY, Nov. 11. Aboard a motor-truck which has travelled from Melbourne to Darwin and is now returning to the Victorian capital is a journalist who i 3 representing southern newspapers. He has given some fine accounts of life in outback Australia, but none lias surpassed the word-picture ho paints of conditions he found in droughtstricken Queensland. He telegraphed his message from Rockhampton, after the truck had passed through wide * regions of north-western and central Queensland, which have been in the grip of a long and severe drought, only partially broken s by rains a couple ,of months ago. ' The journalist wrote: “The drought is almost the only topic of conversation in Queensland. At- every place visited by the truck the party has been told of heavy losses and great suffering. It is said that many station owners are in that position only nominally. They are really managers for the financial institutions to which they are hopelessly in debt. There
are many gloomy predictions of what will happen when the drought breaks arid the financial institutions begin to recover the money they have advanced. One large station was said to have lo3t 20,000 cattle, and another station mustered only 400 out of 12,000 sheep. One of the most pa-
the tic sights, seen by the party was all that was left of a mob of breeders that somo one had attempted to move. The mothers were dead, ana the newly-born calves were left to starve to death. In the Northern Territory dingoes, eagles, and crows were seen attacking, beasts that were not yet dead. They were being torn to pieces while they stood, and the empty sockets! from which the eyes had been plucked seemed to plead for an end to their agony. When possible a merciful bullet was dispatched to end the beast’s suffering. A station owner near Rockhampton said that for four months he had not had tho moral courage to inspect 60 square miles of his land. The monotony of the' sun-baked country made it easy to appreciate why. Arctic explorers took bunches of brightly-coloured ribbons with them to relieve the strain on their eyes.
“The thin green grass that was i bravely pushing a way through the hard soil between Winton and Longreach was a welcome sight. The grass was only a patch, how'ever, and the country from Longreach to the coast was as dry as any in the Northern Territory. Even in the midst,of this desolation the Australian joked. At had not been a good shower of rain for five years, the party inquired about a strange bird that was flying overhead. Some ono promptly said that the birds were really frogs that bad given up tho hope of over being able to swim, and in desperation had grown wings. “The drought has brought about a
boom in the motor trade, for every station is carting feed. At Winton seven motor-trucks w r ere sold by one agent in a day. A station owner said that so far this year he had paid £4OOO to one carrier for carting feed 50 miles from tho railhead. The stations began artificial feeding on the expectation of early rain, and soon they had spent so much money that they had to continue to retrieve some of the loss.”
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19261130.2.4
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Shannon News, 30 November 1926, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
554QUEENSLAND DROUGHT Shannon News, 30 November 1926, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Copyright undetermined – untraced rights owner. For advice on reproduction of material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.