Townsville Bulletin

Farm aid comes from the clouds

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THE clouds come in black as ripe mulberries and you just know, from the low rumbling thunder and the strange expectant hush that spreads across the landscape, that this is going to be a big one.

And when those fat drops hit the dust near the shed and the homestead roof sends up that cacophony as rivers pouring from the sky smash into corrugated iron, everyone’s face breaks into doltish grins that last as long as the rain keeps falling.

Real rain has come to much of Australia’s east coast this week and no one among us can truly calibrate the good that comes with it, whether that good be gauged in financial, environmen­tal or emotional terms.

Without being in any way melodramat­ic, these rains will have saved at least one life as some ageing, weary and heavily indebted elderly grazier sits at that untidy desk on the veranda that serves as his office as the rain drums on his roof.

And he’ll run a stubby pencil (”the wife uses the computer, I don’t touch it’’) over a few numbers including the surging Eastern Young Cattle Indicator and that monthly $12,000 feed bill that is about to cease, and he’ll feel a surge of confidence returning to his aching bones.

He’ll ride around in the rain on the old ag-bike with the kelpie sitting up on the petrol tank and plan a winter feed crop and even begin wondering if he might take a trip to town to look at that Massey Ferguson 4600.

The future brightens, all things seem possible again and that sense of renewal goes all the way to a State Government for which rain means surging tax receipts, more export dollars and a return of confidence among consumers, as well as an electorate that will this year decide its fate.

But it is from Queensland’s primary-producing sector that the February rain will receive its warmest welcome and out past Miles, grazier Tom Nixon of the highly regarded Devon Court Stud is hoping March will seal the deal. On the Nixons’ property the improved pastures have sprung back into life almost miraculous­ly after years of moisture deprivatio­n but more rain will only bounce off sodden soil into run-off in the more waterlogge­d areas.

Graziers want a few weeks of dry weather and then some good rains in March to help ensure they, and the rest of the state, enjoy a prosperous 2020.

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