Supplejack Downs

Suplejack Downs
Location in Northern Territory

Coordinates: 19°16′47″S 129°56′33″E / 19.27967°S 129.94246°E / -19.27967; 129.94246 (Suplejack Downs) Supplejack Downs also known as Suplejack Downs is a pastoral lease operating as a cattle station in the Northern Territory.

The property is situated approximately 127 kilometres (79 mi) south west of Lajamanu and 760 kilometres (472 mi) south of Darwin in the central west of the Northern Territory. Supplejack shares a boundary with the Purtu Aboriginal Land Trust to the west and is otherwise surrounded by vacant crown land.[1]

Suplejack occupies an area of 3,823 square kilometres (1,476 sq mi) along the margins of the Tanami Desert and accessible by the Tanami Track. The country is composed of rolling hills, tablelands open plains and flood-out country. Herbage such as Mitchell grass, Flinders grass and Oat grass along with trees and shrubs including Suplejack, Mulga, Whitewood and Spinifex. The property supports a herd of approximately 8,000 cattle.[2]

The property was established in 1961 by Bob and Lil Savage when they were granted a grazing licence to the area.[3] Construction of a homestead commenced in 1965 as did fencing a drilling of bores and by 1966 two bores had been sunk and 10 kilometres (6 mi) of fencing had been erected. [3] The Savages has previously worked on nearby stations, Hooker Creek and Yuendumu, before deciding on settling at Suplejack.

In 1976 the property occupied an area of 4,338 square kilometres (1,675 sq mi) and was subject to a claim of being a traditional dreaming area of four Aboriginal men, all members of the Walbiri tribe. [4] Another family, the Cooks, were also living at Suplejack in 1976.

A pastoral lease was granted to the Savages by the government in 1978 which they still held in 2011.[5]

Tragedy struck the Cook family during the cattle muster of 2008 when a helicopter crash left Rob Cook a quadriplegic as a result of spinal injuries he received in the crash. The pastoral community rallied round the Cook family and raised A$75,000 to support them while Rob received treatment in an Adelaide hospital.[6] Rob later crossed the Tanami Desert in his modified four wheel drive wheelchair to raise money for his Nuffield scholarship, and was awarded a courage medal at the national Pride of Australia awards in 2011.[7]

See also

References

  1. "Northern Territory Pastoral Properties" (PDF). Northern Territory Government. 2003. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
  2. Kerry Sharp (January 2013). "Spendid Isolation". Outback Magazine. R. M. Williams. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  3. 1 2 "A family's 15 year fight for a future". Sydney Morning Herald. Google. 8 April 1976. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  4. "Two great Australian dreams collide at Suplejack Downs". Sydney Morning Herald. Google. 7 April 1976. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  5. "Suplejack Station". Alice Springs School of the Air. 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  6. "Industry rallies to support injured NT cattleman" (PDF). Northern Territory Cattle News. Northern Territory Cattlemen's Association. November 2008. Retrieved 8 September 2013. line feed character in |title= at position 28 (help)
  7. "Our Rob embodies heroic human spirit". NT News. News Limited. 23 November 2011. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
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