Spinifex and Sand by David Wynford Carnegie
page 294 of 398 (73%)
page 294 of 398 (73%)
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Cut off, as it is, by the desert, the district has the disadvantage of none but sea communication with the rest of the Colony. This necessitates the double shipment of live stock, once at either port, Derby or Wyndham, after they have been driven so far from the stations, and once again at Fremantle. A coastal stock route is debarred by the poverty of the country between Derby and the De Grey River, and a direct stock route through the desert is manifestly impracticable. It seems to me that too little attention has been given to horse-breeding, and that a remunerative trade might be carried on between Kimberley and India, to which this district is nearer than any other part of Australia. What horses are bred, though otherwise excellent, are small--a defect that should easily be remedied. The cattle, too, are rather on the small side, and this again, by more careful attention to breeding, could be improved upon. Hall's Creek is by no means a large town; in fact, it consists of exactly nine buildings--post and telegraph office and Warden's office and court, Warden's house, hospital, gaol, police-station, sergeant's house, butcher's shop and house, store, and hotel. Besides these there are several nomadic dwellings, such as tents, bush humpies, and drays. A house is a luxury, and some of the oldest residents have never built one. "Here to-day and gone to-morrow, what's the good of a house?" was the answer I got from one who had only been there for ten years! Mud-brick walls and corrugated-iron roofs is the style of architecture in |
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