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Shotguns - Broken Hill Field and Game

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Well, we're camped at the shooting range of Broken Hill Field and Game Association. We come to be camped here because our traveling companions, members of the Bermagui Field and Game Association, are shooting in the current competition over the weekend and it worked in well to incorporate this shoot in our wider outback adventure.

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Kayak

Kayak on Bega River

Not only is a kayak a great fitness machine but it gets me around the flat water rivers and lakes to enjoy and photograph their unique landscape, near on impossible otherwise.

Quadbike

Hut overlooking Lake Eucumbene

With a cruising speed of around 50k/h on good going, the 4x4 bike and trailer carry photography gear, camp and tucker over considerable distances, allowing camping on site for the best light.

Mountain Bike

Lily and Granddad on mountain bikes

On the mountain bike I travel close enough to the ground and slow enough to see quite a bit that may otherwise be missed. Of course, the bike is mainly for travel on rural roads and tracks.

On Foot

Beach near Point Hicks

With a pack on my back, it's often not necessary to cover a great distance to capture the wilderness landscape. Anything from a few hundred metres to 15km can make a great day out in an isolated environment.

Camping in an abandoned stockmen's hut can be a rewarding experience. The hut's history lingers. A presence remains. An outback hut can have a warm, welcoming feeling or be frighteningly, cold.

It was common in the late 1800s and early to mid 1900s for a large station to have outstations. A hut, yard for sheep, crutching shed, well for a water supply. That's about all they needed.

A couple of stockmen or a man and his family would occupy the hut and manage the flock at the isolated outstation.

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At intervals, the station manager or pastoralist would ride out to check on things. So the outstations would generally be a day's ride from the homestead. The manager would stay overnight and ride on the next day, possibly to the next outstation.

At shearing time the sheep would be driven to the wool shed at the homestead. Sheep can safely be driven two days between water points.

Then, after shearing, back to the familiar hut. A solitary, isolated life for the outback stockmen.

Many of the huts are built straight on the ground. The newer huts have a concrete floor while many an abandoned hut has a slate floor, slate being reasonably common in the arid region.

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