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Bundaleer Station

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15-632: 33°18′30″S 138°35′45″E  /  33.30842°S 138.59591°E  / -33.30842; 138.59591  ( Bundaleer ) Bundaleer Station was a pastoral lease that operated as a sheep station in South Australia . It is situated approximately 12 kilometres (7 mi) south of Jamestown and 21 kilometres (13 mi) north of Spalding . The property was established in 1841 by John Bristow Hughes and occupied an area of 312 square miles (808 km). In 1854, Charles Brown Fisher bought Bundaleer from Hughes for £31,000. By 1864 it

30-405: A homeland community , it is still used on large cattle and sheep stations today, for example Rawlinna sheep station . Where the climate and vegetation allow, especially north of the dog fence , cattle stations are similar but run beef cattle rather than sheep. Some properties are not exclusively sheep or cattle stations but may have a mix of cattle, sheep, cropping and even goats which makes

45-473: A landing strip available for use by the Royal Flying Doctor Service and other light aircraft. Historically, an outstation was a subsidiary homestead or other dwelling on Australian sheep or cattle stations that was more than a day’s return travel from the main homestead. Although the term later came to be more commonly used to describe a specific type of Aboriginal settlement, also known as

60-410: A granular form to be added to food, pill form, chew tablets, and liquid suspensions. Horses are most often dewormed with a paste or gel placed on the back of the animal's mouth via a dosing syringe; feed dewormers are also used, both single-dose varieties and in a daily, "continuous" feed form. Deworming (drenching) a sheep is usually done with a specific drenching gun that squirts an anthelmintic into

75-439: A human or animals to rid them of helminths parasites , such as roundworm , flukes and tapeworm . Purge dewormers for use in livestock can be formulated as a feed supplement that is eaten, a paste or gel that is deposited at the back of the animal's mouth, a liquid drench given orally, an injectable, or as a pour-on which can be applied to the animal's topline. In dogs and cats , purge dewormers come in many forms including

90-403: A problem. The term "sheep run" was commonly used during the early settlement period to describe an unfenced tract of land operated by squatters, later used of a large station property, fenced or unfenced. For administrative purposes, many stations exist on pastoral leases , but in state government jurisdictions they are increasingly known as stations. The term " playing for sheep stations "

105-406: Is 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) across Lake Wakatipu from Queenstown , 40 minutes steaming time on the historic TSS Earnslaw steamship. Two well-known nineteenth-century authors have written about life on a sheep station: Deworming Deworming (sometimes known as worming , drenching or dehelmintization ) is the giving of an anthelmintic drug (a wormer , dewormer , or drench ) to

120-519: Is an important routine on a sheep station. Other activities include ram buying and classing the sheep in order to determine the inferior types that are to be culled. Crops and pastures are often also grown to provide additional feed for the sheep, especially those that will be raised and sold as prime lambs. Fences require regular inspections to locate and repair any damage that has been found. Sheep breeders may also need to undertake predatory animal control if crows , dingos or foxes are likely to be

135-524: Is used to denote a large or serious game, usually in the expression "we're not playing for sheep stations". Rawlinna Station in Western Australia is the largest sheep station in Australia, covering about 10,117 square kilometres (3,906 sq mi) or 2.5 million acres. Walter Peak is a notable old sheep station that was founded in 1860 on the south shore of Lake Wakatipu , South Island, New Zealand . It

150-510: The Merinos are usually in the high country of the South Island . These properties may be thousands of square kilometres in size and run low stocking rates to be able to sustainably provide enough feed and water for the stock. In Australia, the owner of a sheep station may be called a pastoralist , a grazier , or formerly a squatter (as in " Waltzing Matilda "), when their sheep grazing land

165-399: The mother. Depending on animal health and lifestyle factors, quarterly treatments may also be recommended. Mass deworming campaigns of school children have been used both as a preventive as well as a treatment method for helminthiasis , which includes soil transmitted helminthiasis in children. Children can be treated by administering, for example, mebendazole and albendazole . The cost

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180-519: The owner less vulnerable to changes in wool or beef prices. Management practices vary according to the location of the station and the season being experienced. For instance, drought necessitates decisions concerning the sale of stock or provision of supplementary feeding. Routine procedures include supervising crutching , mating, shearing , treating for ticks , lice and maggots (if necessary), lambing and lamb marking. Lambs are weaned at about five months of age. Drenching for internal parasites

195-496: The sheep's throat. Recently anthelmintic herbal drugs and vaccines have been used against gastrointestinal nematodes due to an increase in resistance to anthelmintic drugs that showed significant potential against parasites in large animals. The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) recommends deworming treatments at 2, 4, 6, and 8 weeks of age for puppies and concurrent treatments to the mother.They also recommend deworming treatments at 3, 5, 7, and 9 weeks of age for kittens and

210-455: Was estimated that the property was carrying about 80,000 sheep worth over £40,000. Sheep station A sheep station is a large property ( station , the equivalent of a ranch ) in Australia or New Zealand , whose main activity is the raising of sheep for their wool and/or meat . In Australia, sheep stations are usually in the south-east or south-west of the country. In New Zealand

225-569: Was referred to as a sheep run . Sheep stations and sheep husbandry began in Australia when the British colonisers started raising sheep in 1788 at Sydney Cove . In the Australian and New Zealand context, shearing involves an annual muster of sheep to be shorn, and the shearing shed and shearers' quarters are an important part of the station. A station usually also includes a homestead , adjacent sheds , windmills , dams, silos and in many cases

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