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Today's Stories from our PastAuthor: Greg and Peter
A podcast about Australian family stories and social history. Everyone has a story that we want to tell. To contact us, email us at: todaysstories101@gmail.com or search for "Today's Stories from our Past" on Facebook or YouTube. Language: en-au Genres: History, Personal Journals, Society & Culture Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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E22 - Off to the Rush - Life and Death along the Track
Friday, 27 February, 2026
Send a textA flooded river, a stubborn pony, and a crooked border set the stage for a journey that refuses to fit neat lines on a map. We follow our hardy party from Lake Bonney through sand and scrub toward Lake Victoria, rebuilding their path from terse diary entries and hard choices made under rain-heavy skies. What some call Freeman’s Creek aligns with Ral Ral, and distances snap into focus: eighteen rough miles off the river flats, then a camp where a stockkeeper, local guides, and a “mungo” canoe become essential to keeping the trek alive.The path knots around station histories that blur and split—Bookmark, Chowilla, Calperum—revealing how names shift as leases change hands and memories fade. Ten days vanish as bullocks wander deep into the saltbush, and the camp becomes a crossroads of labour and knowledge. Flooded lowlands force a northern swing around Lake Victoria, past salt springs that earlier travellers noted for their bite and their perfume. Flowing out of Lake Victoria is the Rufus River, a calm name that carries a darker legacy, where contact turned to conflict after waves of stock and squatters pressed hard on country that had sustained First Nations trade and life for generations.Threaded through the map is another story: a boundary meant to be straight but surveyed askew. The 141st meridian collides with timekeeping limits, courtrooms, and politics, leaving a permanent jog across the Murray and an obelisk to mark both precision and compromise. And yet, in the midst of lost cattle and contested lines, something tender happens at dawn by the lake: Mary Emmett gives birth, and a new voice joins the caravan of history. It’s a reminder that every route is walked by people whose days are made of small meals, shared words, and the will to carry on.If this story moved you or taught you something new about the Murray, Chowilla, and the people who crossed and cared for this country, follow the show, leave a review, and share it with a friend who loves Australian history. Your notes help others find the journey.Contact us at todaysstories101@gmail.com or watch recent episodes on YouTube.







