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	<title>Australian Bushroots - Stories from the Aussie Bush &#187; The Road Gang</title>
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		<title>The Road Gang</title>
		<link>http://bushroots.com/wp/2009/03/the-road-gang/</link>
		<comments>http://bushroots.com/wp/2009/03/the-road-gang/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Mar 2009 09:39:17 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Bush Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Road Gang]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Introduction
The earth moving industry in modern times is powered by huge machinery often with the luxury of air-conditioned cabs for operator comfort. Vast amounts of earth in a single day can be moved creating large water storage’s, “tanks”. Lengthy stretches of outback-corrugated road can now be graded in a day.
We both stand testament to this, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p id="top" /><em><strong>Introduction</strong></em></p>
<p><em>The earth moving industry in modern times is powered by huge machinery often with the luxury of air-conditioned cabs for operator comfort. Vast amounts of earth in a single day can be moved creating large water storage’s, “tanks”. Lengthy stretches of outback-corrugated road can now be graded in a day.</em></p>
<p><em>We both stand testament to this, having both worked as earth moving contractors throughout outback NSW.</em></p>
<p><em>Ron’s ancestors were earthmoving contractors also, but they used an entirely different type of plant. They used “Clydesdales” and “Bullock Teams” to haul scoops for tank sinking and road ploughs and grader blades for road making. They carved roads up the sides of mountains all over the Northern Rivers Region of NSW, in the days that it was called “The Big Scrub”, and its primary industry was the cedar industry.</em></p>
<p><em>Apart from mountains and cedar and rainforests, the area is known for its high rainfall, the highest in NSW by far. It was while driving on a road still in existence that was built by these tough bushies, in a torrential down pour and marveling at their feat when the inspiration to write about them came. This poem is dedicated to those early “earthmovers” who certainly had it tougher than us. </em></p>
<p> </p>
<p>By bark slab huts hidden in forests tall<br />
And beside the bubbling creeks<br />
Where ten inches of rain in a day can fall<br />
And flood you in for weeks<br />
Where men can’t walk they have to wade<br />
Cause the ground all round is mud<br />
Old roads are lost and new ones made<br />
And the price is paid in blood</p>
<p>The bullocky snarls at the falling rain<br />
With a dreary sodden curse<br />
Then trudges on in weary pain<br />
That is slowly getting worse<br />
With a hand firm on his bullocks head<br />
Round the mountain side they trudge<br />
Trying to remember his last dry bed<br />
And trying to ignore the sludge</p>
<p>A smoke is rolled under a battered brim<br />
To shield from the pouring rain<br />
Lit with stiffened hand cupped to hairy chin<br />
But it gets wet just the same<br />
It falls in half further down the track<br />
So it is left there where it fell<br />
He wonders why as he wanders back<br />
There’s so much water in hell</p>
<p>Torrents down the mountain side<br />
Fall down to a ferny glen<br />
Where a team last week went a little wide<br />
And that was the last of them<br />
The bullock driver also lost his life<br />
Because he tried to save his team<br />
Then straws were drawn to tell his wife<br />
Camped further down the stream</p>
<p>Road plows pulled with Clydesdale strength<br />
Lay wider the treacherous trail<br />
No gamer beast found in nature’s length<br />
Their hearts refuse to fail<br />
But if the plow pulls wide and starts to slip<br />
And the driver reacts too slow<br />
It will pull the horses out over the lip<br />
And down to their deaths below</p>
<p>Winding slowly up through thick black clouds<br />
The road is carved by flesh and bone<br />
Leaving graves marked only by leafy shrouds<br />
And at the head a mossy stone<br />
The road gets built over the mountain side<br />
Despite the constant flood<br />
And those that remember the ones who died<br />
Know the price was paid in blood</p>
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