POV: Experience a Day on an Outback Cattle Station Dog Baiting
Ойын-сауық
Experience a thrilling day on an outback cattle station as you join Jack for a POV (point-of-view) adventure in dog baiting. Learn firsthand about the crucial role of dog baits in wildlife management and pest control in the vast expanse of the Australian outback.
With Jack as your guide, you'll witness the careful placement of dog baits to effectively target specific species, ensuring the success of this important pest eradication process. Discover the vital role that dog baiting plays in maintaining ecological balance, protecting wildlife, and livestock.
Embark on a unique journey through rural Australia, gaining insights into station activities, farm practices, and the commitment to sustainable agriculture and land management. This immersive experience will open your eyes to the challenges and triumphs of wildlife protection and environmental conservation in the remote corners of the country. Join us on this exciting adventure and discover the intricacies of responsible pest management and the preservation of the stunning Australian landscape.
Пікірлер: 224
Why I watch, I found you by accident with the camel culling. I try to watch all the episodes I can because I find what you do and how you do it very interesting and you and your wife are awesome!
Why do I watch. As a 70+ city slicker who has never lived outside Melbourne I find all the information on station life and what needs to be done most enlightening. You explain in everyday language what and why things are done. I find it interesting also to see and hear the boss explain about the need to be exceeding well organised when it comes to home schooling the girls. I must say that I found your channel by accident but I now watch every vid. Just keep on educating me and thanks for time and effort you all put in.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
I'm glad we can bring it to you! We really hope to be able to bring this part of Australia to more Australians and the world. Thanks for joining us. 🤠
@johnjordan4647
11 ай бұрын
Hey Jack when you knocked over that bull camel and left it where it fell isn’t that just leaving tucker for the dogs. Do you get pigs out your way?
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
@@johnjordan4647 potentially, but we saturate the areas they drink with baits, so they will take the extra feed. The pop-n-rot animals usually are bird food. No pigs out this way. And no goats. Which is great.
Keep doing what you’re doing. Showing the world your world. 👍🏽👍🏽🇦🇺👍🏽👍🏽
As a retired dairy farmer here in NZ I love watching how the other half lives. We lived on a beef and sheep station when I was a kid, I am retired now and watch all your videos no matter the subject matter I love how you are straight up about everything ie the culling etc with no BS added for click bate
Why do I watch? Learning about living in isolated / remote places has always appealed to me. You do have a focus - outback station life - and that’s exactly why we watch. You’ve done a great job of highlighting that thus far. You explain things so well, and Ant’s “why do we do that, Jack?” questions, really help us understand. The KZread rabbit hole (Australia, WA, WA Adventures…farming… Tom’s Brook Farm… JH mentions that George is going to Jack out the Back, and boom, you’re in my suggested videos) brought me to your channel and I’m glad it did. Thanks 🍻
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for joining us! Yes, Ant is great at getting more detail out of me, he's teaching me a lot about teaching thoroughly
Why do I watch? I like the variety, the way you guys explain things, and have a joke. Never thought I'd be interested in watching camels be turned into mince etc. but it was enlightening to see the process. I really enjoy your internet/camera/off-grid problem solving. In this video I was, "awww, poor roos", but then you explained why they needed to be controlled, it's much appreciated. Thanks for sharing your day. 😊
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks! We try to have fun out here! We aim to explain the what and why, trying to describe the intent of our actions.
Grew up in NZ and spent a lot of my teenage years on my BIL's farm (weekends) helping with sheep, cattle, hay making. Night time was rewarded with Rabbit, Hare, Possum & some Wallaby eradication. After moving from NZ to MEL we came west in 1980 and did two seasons up at Burakin seeding. I guess that's where my love of WA farming got into my blood. So what i'm saying Jack is I'm reliving my younger years through your Video's. When we were ripping up and seeding (first year) I had the 354. My wife used to bring lunch out and we'd sit in the Chamberlin and eat lunch while I kept driving. Great times..
Most people have zero experience of the outback. You are doing a fantastic job giving a understanding of station life, cattle prices have been profitable and it shows in your set up. I have seen the other side of stations, drought, poor prices, family stress caused by this. You conduct yourself very well and a credit to the pastoral industry. Most of the old die hard pastoralists have been replaced by corporates/big biz .
@bishopkinlyside8477
6 ай бұрын
Hi Jack, I just really like what you’re doing it’s a lot of variety of money and you to your channel but I really enjoy it. I just love being out in the bush but unfortunately I’m in a wheelchair so I can’t be there physically but through your channel I can have a good look around Just love the bush mate and the country people , Cliff from Logan City, Queensland, Australia 🇦🇺🧑🏾🦽
I watch you because since I was a young boy iv always wanted to work on a cattle station and now at 33 and 6 kids and my youngest daughter living with me full-time and doing it all on my own I live my dream by watching you and the crew
I lived in Australia for twenty years, and I miss the bush it is beautiful in its own way, unfortunately I never got to WA! Love your vids, stay safe Family!
Everyday life on the station is so interesting! Thanks Jack 😊
As a 50 yr old American, i watch because i love the beautiful country & the way you folks live. It's very interesting especially for someone who has never been to your amazing country! Love whatever content you provide! Besides, you'll never please 100% of the people 100% of the time! I say keep on keeping on my friend!
I watch because I like the mustering, the waterholes and the pest reduction techniques. I'm a country girl in a city body. I grew up visiting, and at one stage living on, a 2500 acre cattle farm and loved it, riding horses and mustering Murray Greys and a few merinos. There was nothing like coming home exhausted with filthy clothes because I've done a day's work. I live vicariously through your videos because I wish like anything that I could be back out where there's no city glow at night, and birds waking me up in the morning.
I like seeing the variety. I believe you have picked a focus on one thing, your daily life! Keep em coming!
Mate don't listen to those who just want one thing. I'm 74yo pensioner and enjoy every aspect of your videos, it's real reality lifestyle that you and your family live. Even 🐜 🐜. Keep up the great work 👍 👏
I'm watching to see another side of a mans workload and how it is to be where you are. I am amazed by how many different skills you must have to employ and the ingenuity needed to cope with the many challenges. Being retired and needing to be close to home for wife I find it an adventure. Thank you from California
Jack ive been enjoying your vids for about 5 months now when you found the bore site & water i have similar interest in water & since 2010 have destocked as uneconomic we have acerage east of adelaide in the rain shadow but its a great getaway from the humdrum you show great spunk to take your young family out there i like what i see and will watch till the cows come home great stuff & thankyou cheers tim
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Tim 👍 hope it turns around a bit there
I watch because I have so much respect for people who work our land and how innovative you have to be when you need to maintain and repair things, no jumping in the truck for a quick trip to Bunnings. I love how remote the property is, we have travelled many 1000s of kilometres in the outback, and absolutely love the aloneness, keep doing what you do and we will keep watching, hubby loves the maintenance and vermin eradication but he loved today's drop of just the daily grind Diane and Tony.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Diane and Tony!
Variety is the spice of life, showing life outback not always the same thing not always easy. Innovation how versatile you need to be adapt, improvise and overcome. Great work Jack, Jasmine and family
Bloody outstanding that’s because I watch. Growing up on a farm, now living in town brings me joy
I watch from England, i shoot, enjoy countryside , this looks like a dream job, the scale of the place is mind boggling !
I watch it because the scenery is spectacular and the chores are fantastic to watch and learn about, and the commentary is intelligible succinct and rarely repetitive.
Love your channel brother, I watch because everything you do out there is interesting! Love the work life, love the meat harvest, love the land/animal management, love the shooting it’s all awesome. I love parkway drive too 🍻
I watch because I love the outback and would have loved the experience of working on an isolated station. Unfortunately I am now to old to do that. I would say that what you are providing shows what day to day life is like on stations probably throughout Australia. Thankyou for taking the time to do what you do.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Bruce
Like you being genuine, innovative and honest with real agriculture and land management.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Cheers! We will try to keep it up!
Quite a few reasons to watch. All of you involved on the station are good people, you put on entertaining videos; it's easy to watch, and frankly fascinating. And provides a few laughs now and then for a bonus! Seeing the reality of station management, the care and balance needed to care for the land - it's good to see, know and understand. What you all do is so far outside my own experience and day to day (sitting in front of computer screens, managing servers, cloud and massive storage) that I dont even know what questions to ask - it's all new. Keep up the great work!
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Steve, I spend a lot more time in front of the computer now than I used to :P Thanks for always commenting as well!
Well done twix! Comedy sells well. About time we got back to funny adverts instead of companies trying to guilt us into buying their products!
I like the range of different videos
I love seeing the outback and have been there before and enjoyed the people and most of all the scenery
Very well explained. I love the red interior. The preparation involved in everything is awesome, you don't need vehicle troubles out there!
Jack... I'll bet your dad is so grateful for having solar and using technology to know what's going on with all the water points and camel mobs in yards by way of field cameras. Had to be incredibly time consuming in the days before without it! Especially in the worst parts of weather. I enjoy watching everyday life of people living in other countries. Right down to the style of clothes, furniture, architecture of homes and buildings. The economy and farming and ranching. That's the greatest thing about technology for me, is all that I've learned in my old age. I had watched a video about the problem with camels, roos, brumbies, wild dogs etc., but until finding you, I had no idea how bad the camel situation was! I don't have a problem with sh👀ting camels. They are very destructive. You've proven that. I already knew that one camel could consume major amounts of water, but when you show a mob of 30 or more near one of your water points, I can only imagine how fast they could drink down a water tank! If you didn't have solar and the big water storage tanks, your cattle would be very thirsty! Maybe when you have Verely along for several days in a row, you two could learn a language together, then practice at home for an hour at night together. She can study at home by herself and then teach you. It's difficult to learn a new language if you have no one around to learn and speak it with. Good luck in all you do!
I enjoy watching your videos because they are interesting and I love your laid back attitude. You do what you do because it is necessary and is part of your varied lifestyle. I love to see the raw bush and how you deal with challenges that we in the city do not have to deal with.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Glad that we can reach you!
Just found your channel. I like the varied content I have seen so far. Brings back memories from a stay at a station in Qld many years ago. New sub from Sweden!
Jack I have to comment and thank you for a day in the life of you doing Ya job throughly enjoyed and was educated on reasons behind your roles and how you apply yourself excellent video I rate right up there in your best informative ones congratulations on producing this and like more of them 👍👍👍👏👏👏👏👏
I enjoy "Jack Out the Back" for lots of reasons. To view your daily life and events, the endless jobs list's and how you and the lads plus your family deal with tasks that have to be done. From culling and the procedure to produce food and sausages from camels, satellite communication instalation, running a homestead, flying about etc. I'm Into amateur radio so for me I enjoyed the radios and Internet satellite communications you do, I'd personally enjoy watching some more of that but I do understand that it's absolutely not everyone's cup of tea. I think you and your wife are doing a great job on this KZread channel and don't need to worry too much about it as its always an Interesting video to watch for us, bearing in mind that out lives are so different to yours. So what you do daily and probably get used to and maybe find mundane, to us is fascinating. Keep doing what your doing guys, its really interesting to watch. Smuggle George back through immigration he was funny, of course being a POM I thought he was great 😂. Cheers to you all and good health to you.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
We're working on getting more communications up and running, so will be filming that all! I enjoy the communicative a lot as well, I get quite particular when trying to get it right. Thanks for your comments! 👌
A great show Jack, keep up the day to day activities of running a large station, don't change what your showing us the public, some people have no idea what problems you can have to run a property in outback Australia.
I watch because I love seeing how you guys developed the place since I saw it in 2016. Always something new to learn. I love listening to history documentarys and travel blogs when I'm doing repetitive jobs. About language, well since I've been to Finland I've got the idea to learn at least a bit of that language. But- used to learn language easy years ago. And not an easy language. We'll see
Absolutely fantastic video!!
I grew up on a station here in west queensland. one of the smaller ones but the work was just as involved. fixing bore pumps, a LOT of fence maintenance, roo and feral dog/cat and pig culling. it taught me alot about the land and the industry that kept australia afloat all thoughs years ago. So As i now and a 30* y/o man who works in the city now, your channel is a good reminder of my foundations of were i came from and what it taught me. new sub. Keen to see more mate.
@jack_out_the_back
8 ай бұрын
Cheers, I'm glad we can keep you in touch with the land, it's what it's all about 👍
I watch because I appreciate hard dirty work and at the same time my life is so different to the one you live.
Good to see a variety of things as you work about the station
Good stuff mate , love to watch the out back life and maintain a balance on the station.We are country people ourselves and its awesome to see the Camels harvested well. Keep up what your'e doing vid wise as its all relative to station living. 👍👍
You asked about what we like. I’m viewing from Newcastle on the NSW coast. I love the variety of everything you do. That variety is actually compressed into a narrow focus in that it is all about your corner of the world. It just happens to be a big corner. 3:20
33:32 I watch you because I've cattle ranched here in the USA all my life and seen what ranching is like in Costa Rica on a visit there. Now I get to learn about cattle ranching in Australia. Knowledge is power, and I'm educating myself.
Just love your station life keep up the good work
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Cheers!
KZread must have thought that we would find your channel interesting and it was spot on. Over the years we have travelled to many isolated areas in NSW/QLD and parts of Central Australia and thoroughly enjoyed it. However, we haven’t been to WA and so since we are now “arm chair travellers” we are very interested in WA. We chanced on your channel and find the varying topics and dialogue between you, Jasmine, Ant, George etc etc so interesting. Whether your driving, flying or whatever makes little difference as we find it all interesting.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Great to hear, thanks Ron! Glad we can bring it to you!
Jack just keep on doing what your doing now. Don't let KZread consume you,you can't please everyone.😁
Howdy from Sacramento! Thanks for sharing. I watch to get insights into the life in the bush! Good luck w learning a language- an admirable goal. Cheers!
Don't change anything, I love the make do with what you got attitude.
I enjoy seeing how hardy folks live in other parts of the world. Australian outback has always intrigued me. Your great videography and narration brings me back to your site.
Why do I watch. I travelled to Uluru in October and it’s great to see how folks farm and cope with the dry conditions, so different from the lush pastures of Cheshire UK. Always worked with dairy cows and sheep, your cattle are more like wild animals. Never been a great mender myself so it’s also good to see how you tackle repair jobs. Keep the content coming. Thoroughly enjoyable.
yea its music for me when I'm spending a whole day doing a single task
Love your vids and content mate, worked on a few stations now and wish all employers were like you
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks a heap!
I love watching what you do on the station as we farm in the Great Southern area of WA
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Glad we can bring it to you!
I like the mixed stuff you do, keep it just how your doing videos ❤
I like your day Jack as it brings back memory’s of when I mustered cattle in Queensland and sheep and goats in Meekatharra. I still go out back and cull camels about 300 k east of you .I love to tinker with shit and have repaired a few mills in my day .I’ve been a sheep cattle and wheat farmer .I’m a Jack of all trades but master of none as your always learning. Keep up the good work
Hello from USA Illinois. I just found your channel and being from a rural past and never having great opportunity to travel to far away place, I absolutely love the informative, educational and immersive experience. Please keep up the good work and yeah just keep communicating to your audience and they will let you know what to they want and don’t worry as much about the algorithm
Thanks for the video. Been really impressed with your skill in connecting the water points with cameras. The electronics involved are something else. That must make a huge difference in keeping track of issues. In the old days it would have taken weeks by horseback to check them all. Plus just finding them would be a skill in itself. Watching today Jan 1 2024. Take care have a great year.
Why do I watch? I have been binge watching ever since i found one of your videos on feral camel control. Loving your candid perspective on pests, nature, livestock management and how they all interact. I've enjoyed the shooting videos although the frequent feeding problems of the old Enfield drive me a little mad. Mostly I love seeing a part of our country with a level of detail I not many of us have access to. Well done bringing technology and therefore us into the outback.
The flies mate ! Omg so that's where they come from 😆 🤣 😂
Why do I watch! I live in North East Scotland a totally different world to yours, I love the down to real life content. Unlike so many others where it just a farce with bloody music blasting away because they have no real content and they do it because they’re arseholes stroking their own ego, enough said on that. Stay safe and well 👍🏴
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Cheers Alasdair! I always enjoy reading your comment, you to.
@alasdairhamilton1574
11 ай бұрын
@@jack_out_the_back Jack,Jasmine. Not seen Ant, don’t tell me he was a “ non contributing shareholder” and ended up with the Camels 😜👍🏴
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
@@alasdairhamilton1574 He was still on break when I filmed this one, he is back now and getting back into the swing of things!
I want to see every thing I enjoy watching all the things you get up to keep at it good variety good stuff
The buzzards must love you! Great video on land management. I watch because we have similar issues with feral hogs in Texas. They cause billions of dollars in land and crop damage.
Hey Jack, I find your videos really interesting, with loads of variety, we live 3 hours from Perth in the wheatbelt, it amuses me when city folk say we are in the outback (ridiculous).where you are is truly remote and not a lot of people could survive there let alone live and work there. As you can see from my thumbnail I am a horseman and as much as I hate the idea of shooting horses , donkeys and all ferals, I totally agree with the necessity of doing so. don't change your format mate, what you're doing is great.
I live in Oklahoma, USA, family raises cattle, I do not but find it interesting. Just discovered your channel, awesome job.
Loved it , watch you because it's very interesting to learn about different countries and their traditions And I also like watching ya work with and for cattle in a rough environment , honestly we don't know how good we have it amd trust me tomorrow morning when Im breaking ice off watees and walking thru knee deep frozen mud and POO I be thinking about you guys working your cattle in sandy , hot , dry conditions , we've got it good even when tomorrows high is 8 deg and overnight low of 0 to -4 deg F. Good Bless Kyle
Love your videos man
Why do I watch. Ok. former bushy of many years past I can relive those times through your channel. I think more people should watch and gain an understanding of just WHAT and HOW a station is run. I see and understand the changes made to safety through Starlink and your VHF communications and it is also fun to see the antics of Ant but at the same time I understand how someone with no real outback knowledge can ask the questions that he does. Keep at it in the vein that it is. I am enjoying it all.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Michael, Ant's questions are vital to get me to explain things better to everyone, even myself!
I love your broad content, and the environment is so different to close to the coast, your daily life is far different than most of us. Everything you do is worth videoing and putting up. I love your own intranet set up there is still a long way to exploit that facility you have. I enjoyed your explanation of the camel culling for pet meat, very educational. Just like my old roo and pig shooting days. You might consider showing the contents of a cat’s gut with all the birds lizards and small marsupials it has eaten. Do the horses and donkeys get in to the watering yards.
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Thanks! There's a lot more that can be achieved with the connectivity, we hope to enable more people to do it, and then more creative ideas can be put forward and tested. Yes, would be great to discect a cat and show the damage they do! Horses and donkeys use the yards and are easily managed from that point.
@davidmontgomery6170
11 ай бұрын
By ear tagging do you know what your animal losses are on a yearly basis at muster? Could it be some of your cattle have found a natural water source? Would the next IT phase be to exploit your comms network? Would you consider using the bolis method to identify stock m movements or the lack of at the yard entrances. My friend at MT Perry in Qld found a couple of dozen cattle mustered in his yard with the ear tags already cut off. He was away for 3 days but I suppose you don’t have that issue out there at present.
Awesome channel 👍
I watch because I love your lifestyle. I have a mate who runs a sheep station near Menindee NSW. I love going out there, but I havent had the time to visit as much as I would like to. That is about to change as I am now semi retired and have a new vehicle that should be able to handle the gravel roads. Your views on technology and efficiency really interests me.
I’m also a rancher in Alaska I raise bison and elk on a 3000 acre ranch always educational to watch how others run their ranches really enjoy your channel And appreciate all the videos
@MICHAEL-ys3pu
6 ай бұрын
It’s not a ranch, we don’t have ranches in Australia, it’s a Station.
As hard as it sometimes is, that's what freedom is.
23:15 I hike a lot for work, killing noxious weeds, and I listen to a lot of books on audio and podcasts. Great way to spend the long hours
Onya Jack, reallu like your show, suggest showing your workshop routine mate.
Enya is nice and relaxing for long drives.
I've been on your station loved drive though it it great country
Thanks Jack I appreciate watching the lifestyle on a outback station and the different jobs you guys have to do jack off all trades and the conditions you and your family and team live Thanks cheers Tony 👍
🤣 i knew there was a reason i liked your videos so much parkway drive is my shit after i listened to sleep walker i was hooked went to their concert in Wangaratta Victoria in 2006
Mate I stumbled across your channel awhile ago ( the invasion begins) had a chuckle imagining what our yank cousin's would think about the red dust and rust in the mag. I'm enjoying the lack of hype for views that you can get on some channels. Keep up the good work.
Like your videos but especially managing camels and kangaroos. Love the action
Honestly I like watching your videos as you are very good at educating people as to the how, why and the environmental impact every task has no the property. As I grew up on a farm an understand there are tasks on farms that just have to be done. They are generally now pretty. But they have a multi layered effect on the whole system and environment. I also like how you explain things in great detail but in a way that everyone can understand. It’s just a shame that you can’t economically capitalise on the camel issue. As it could be a good line of income if there was an economically viable solution. As you have said on another video it’s a shame there isn’t a mobile processing facility to harvest the meat and other products from the camel. Fingers crossed that one day there is a solution available
starlink is the best i love it
We watch as we like you,your family ,parents and uncle and all the imput they have to help run the station,sorting the mechanical problems and your understsnding and working with your staff. All in all an alright bugger. PS notice a new rifle which looks like either a Brno 600 or a CZ. Cheers
Love everything you do . The more the better, a life l would of liked to of had but unfortunately I never got the opportunity.
Keep doing what you’re doing mate awesome content mix it up maybe some bush cooking 🍺🍺🇦🇺👍
Just found your hidden jem,really enjoying the videos,don’t always pick up on Danny though.
Love the channel Jack. Have worked on Stations when young so I can appreciate all you do. Questions! How big is the property ? What is it’s name ? Where are you located?
I watch to see life in a different part of Australia from where I live. Southern Tassy doesn't have much desert country!😂
Since finding your channel, I watch because of the great content, and reminds me of my old life on the station, nice rifle your using, I see it’s a 223 but couldn’t quite see the make is it a Remington?
@jack_out_the_back
8 ай бұрын
Zastava a mini mauser action, wonderful rifle.
It's different and interesting
I like to watch your videos, because I want to see what you do and why you do it. Sometimes I still wonder what your doing, like taking something out of the water tank, but still don't know what it is. How did it get in the water tank? And why is their a fence around the water tank, but the gate is open to allow everything in. Would love to hunt/cull the pests you have to deal with. Not fancy on the flies though.
Good onya Jack, I watch because of the diversity of not only the job but also the way you explain what you are doing and why. By the way do you need a boily come all rounder
I just found your channel. Love watching your day to day life. Especially like the critter control. It's very stupid your government ties yours hands on the right weapons/rifles to do your job right. I like all the specific info you tell us about on why you do what you do. Also love that you fly to do some work. Keep up the good work.
I see you leave the ute running for the aircon! 😛
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
Haha more for the starlink 🤣
Just checked out your music choices, here in the states
Great content mate, What caliber do you use ? Is that a Ruger with threaded barrel ?
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
That's my .223 it's a Zastava, so it's a genuine mini-Mauser. Yes it's threaded with a muzzle break and a shroud to protect it in the rack. She goes really well.
Just curious. Looking at those water troughs, they get algae due to the sun , would it be worth to build a roof over the top or would the cows push the posts down, also does the 1080 kill mice, lizards,birds ect love the channel, keep up the great work and looking forward to seeing the new plane, take care .
@jack_out_the_back
11 ай бұрын
The 1080 isn't used on mice, and I'm not aware of it killing lizards and birds. We have some troughs in the shade of the trees, and shades could work at reducing the algae growth.
Do you give salt or mineral lick to your cattle. The pick up alot of bones, which you took out of the drinking trough.
Jack with an auto loader you need to brush out the chamber with a 45 caliber brush. Really helps with jamming