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Meet The Shadforths - A Family of Bull Catchers | Outback Ringer 3 года назад


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Meet The Shadforths - A Family of Bull Catchers | Outback Ringer

The Shadforths have been catching feral bulls at their family-owned property in the Northern Territory since the 1950s. The family are Garawa people from the Gulf Country, and boast an impressive lineage linking back to William Shadforth, who became the first Indigenous person in Australia to own a cattle station. At the moment Clarry runs Seven Emu Station, with help from his dad Frank and son Francis. #OutbackRinger Subscribe now: http://ab.co/subscribe ___________________________________________ Produced by Ben Davies, the creator of the hit series Bondi Rescue, with Territorian Thomas Lawrence, the gripping 10-part series tracks the highs and lows of four teams of ‘ringers’ - feral bull catchers. Liz and Willy Cook are a husband and wife team, Kurt Hammer is a master bull catcher worth around 40 million dollars, young gun Lach McClymont is looking to make his mark and Indigenous Australian Clarry Shadforth is a 3rd generation bull catcher training up his 17-year-old son Francis. Bull catching is big business, with some 300 thousand feral bulls and buffalo wandering Australia’s outback unclaimed. If caught, these animals are worth up to a staggering 150 million dollars. It’s a major industry, especially for Indigenous Australians. Each year, the Ringers strike a deal with the top-end landowners - in exchange for access to their land, they’ll share the profits from selling the bulls in the livestock market. But it’s not easy work - these animals have never seen humans and will try to avoid capture. In extreme isolation the Ringers accept they can be gored by bulls or killed in vehicle or chopper accidents. In a high stakes world of boom or bust, they drive modified Mad Max style 4WDs at breakneck speeds as they seek their fortunes. Cattle and buffalo were imported into Australia during early British settlement and with no real restrictions, their herds grew to massive numbers. They are now feral animals, large pests which destroy the natural environment. If they’re not caught by Ringers they’re “shot-out” in culling programs, so catching these feral animals not only benefits the land, but is also more humane. This October join the Outback Ringers on a thrilling journey into the land that time forgot. Stream from 20 October on iview: https://iview.abc.net.au/ ___________________________________________ Yeah, there's been four generations of us. Just born and bred into it, ey? When I grew up I looked up to my father heaps. I still sort of look up to him now. You know, I ring him and get advice and that off him. 99 per cent of the time and he's right. If he gives me advice on this sort of thing, I sort of take it and generally it works out. Francis, I think he wants to have a crack at it. Got a bit of butterflies, bit nervous.

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