Hay And Hell And Booligal
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Hay And Hell And Booligal
Hay and Hell and Booligal is a poem by the Australian bush poet Banjo Paterson, A. B. 'Banjo' Paterson who wrote the poem while working as a solicitor with the firm of Street & Paterson in Sydney. It was first published in ''The Bulletin (Australian periodical), The Bulletin'' on 25 April 1896.''The Bulletin'', 25 April 1896, Vol. 17 No. 845, page 9. The poem was later included in Paterson's collection ''Rio Grande's Last Race and Other Verses'', first published in 1902. The phrase "Hay and Hell and Booligal" and its more common variant "Hay, Hell and Booligal" is used figuratively in the Australian vernacular "to designate a place of the greatest imaginable discomfort".  The phrase was popularised by Paterson's poem, but the expression pre-dates his work. Hay, New South Wales, Hay is a town in south-western New South Wales on the Murrumbidgee River.  Booligal is a town on the Lachlan River, 76 kilometres (47 miles) north of Hay by road.  The road connecting the ...
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Bush Poet
The bush ballad, bush song or bush poem is a style of poetry and folk music that depicts the life, character and scenery of the Australian bush. The typical bush ballad employs a straightforward rhyme structure to narrate a story, often one of action and adventure, and uses language that is colourful, colloquial and idiomatically Australian. Bush ballads range in tone from humorous to melancholic, and many explore themes of Australian folklore, including bushranger, bushranging, drover (Australian), droving, drought in Australia, droughts, floods in Australia, floods, life on the frontier, and relations between Indigenous Australians, Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. The tradition dates back to the beginnings of European settlement of Australia, European settlement when colonists, mostly British and Irish, brought with them the folk music of their homelands. Many early bush poems originated in convicts in Australia, Australia's convict system, and were transmitted orall ...
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Stock Route
A stock route, also known as travelling stock route (TSR), is an authorised thoroughfare for the walking of domestic livestock such as sheep or cattle from one location to another in Australia. The stock routes across the country are colloquially known as The Long Paddock or Long Paddock. A travelling stock route may often be distinguished from an ordinary country road by the fact that the grassy verges on either side of the road are very much wider, and the property fences being set back much further from the roadside than is usual, or open stretches of unfenced land. The reason for this is so that the livestock may feed on the vegetation that grows on the verges as they travel, especially in times of drought. The rugged remote stock route that follows the Guy Fawkes River through Guy Fawkes River National Park is part of the Bicentennial National Trail. Usage By law, the travelling stock must travel "six miles a day" (approximately 10 kilometres per day). This is to avoid all ...
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