True blue heritage horses in Goonoo Goonoo, New South Wales, Australia | Agricultural cooperative
True blue heritage horses
Locality: Goonoo Goonoo, New South Wales, Australia
Phone: +61 427 670 380
Address: 13330 New England hwy 2340 Goonoo Goonoo, NSW, Australia
Website:
Likes: 2011
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25.01.2022 This is True Blue Dusty with Rob. - Rob Usher
23.01.2022 Fist time with weighted bags and bridal on .
22.01.2022 expression of interest on all our horses , all brood mares Gf Mckenzie and our QH mare are not for sale
21.01.2022 TB Goldie changing colour. Her legs are a gold colour in the sun shining on them
20.01.2022 This is True Blue Drover. Only the second time leading. - Rob Usher
20.01.2022 T/B Goldie down on the creek today
14.01.2022 Anyone wishing to chat our Brumbies there is a page for you to do that with out the politics ..https://www.facebook.com/groups/311822996883188/?ref=group_header
13.01.2022 TB Drover and TB Ghost
12.01.2022 Stock clearance $900. TB Goldie 17 months old filly by QH Ruby
11.01.2022 EOI GF Rivergum with her foals while with us , All brood mares must go. In foal to GF McKenzie due to foal march april MAKE A OFFER
10.01.2022 Its not just Halloween today. On this day 102 years ago, the Australian Light Hose took Beersheba after a bloody battle. Take a moment to remember our animals o...f war. LEST WE FORGET Bill the Bastard. - By Liz Martin OAM Bill the Bastard was without doubt Australia's greatest war horse and a true legend of remember our animals of war. Gallipoli and the Battle of Romani in WWI. He was a massive horse unmatched in power, intelligence, stubbornness and courage. In size, character and performance he stood above most of the other Australian horses sent to the Middle East in the Great War. Bill the Bastard was a chestnut waler, an Australian breed of riding horse developed from horses that were brought to the Australian colonies in the 19th century. Bred in New South Wales, they were originally known as "New South Wales. Bill was fractious, fierce and built like a rhinoceros. At 17 hands, with a will of steel, he was the unbreakable horse. Many tried but his spirit was strong. Bill had all the attributes the Army looked for in a lighthouse but had one insurmountable problem; he would not let anyone ride him. Bill's military life had started at Sydney's Liverpool Army Camp where he was used to test the skill and strength of would-be lighthorsemen. After bucking each eager recruit, one after the other, with ease the huge chestnut was demoted to pack horse. Some said Bill took pleasure in watching would-be riders unceremoniously hit the dust, certainly the seasoned riders who matched him up with new riders did. After Bill was deemed unrideable he was sent to war as a pack horse to cart supplies and munitions. He famously carted the mail in Gallipoli and was the steed given the task of carrying the body of war hero John Simpson from the battlefield in May 1915. As unlikely as it would seem, Bill the Bastard went on to become a wartime legend and hero, famed for his incredible stamina and for saving many soldiers’ lives. It was Bill’s relationship with his rider, Major Michael Shanahan, that gave the packhorse the chance to become the hero he was meant to be. Before that, he was treated as a bit of a joke, according to biographer, war historian and author Professor Roland Perry. On one ocassion where enemy fire killed his rider, the Anzac and British troops bet on whether the horse would survive the fierce battle or also die. They could see his heroic efforts from the trenches. Bill made it and thereafter never faulted in bringing the post to Anzac Cove.The men on Gallipoli never knew whether their mail would reach them or be shot down by Turks on its seven-kilometre journey from the beach. The cavalry men were shot off, but Bill always reared up and always got through. He was once saved by a vet who worked very quickly on a flesh wound." Bill later left Gallipoli with bullet in his rump. Journeying between Suvla Bay and Anzac Cove, Bill suffered two more gunshot wounds. One bullet was never removed Major Shanahan saw this and thought he would try to get the horse. He saw the big horse's will to live and military potential where others did not. At the time, the military treated horses roughly, whipping them freely, pulling on the reins and riding them until they collapsed. Desperate times called for desperate measures. It was life or death. But Shanahan was 100 years ahead of his time. He gave Bill the respect he deserved. Shanahan was a brilliant horse whisperer. He would cajole but was never brutal. He nursed the horse, sang Aussie ditties to him, went swimming with him and fed him Licorice Allsorts. Bill the Bastard grew to love Shanahan. His loyalty to his rider was nothing short of outstanding. Bill soon gained a reputation for being fearless, standing his ground in an ambush and warning his rider of danger ahead, using his keen instinct and sense of smell. Shanahan persuaded his captain, Banjo Paterson, to let him take Bill the Bastard into battle when 200,000 horses headed out into the 50 sandy windblown desert for the pivotal Battle of Romani. Both sides desperately needed a win to take control of the much prized water wells. August 5, 1916, should be a date writ large in Australian history, said Prof Perry. It was a magnificent effort. Bill's spirit became hugely important during one of the many crisis in the battle of Romani. A pitched battle was raging between the Turks and Australians, with the two sides just 35 metres apart, warring in the dark of night. Bill's heroic efforts and exceptional instincts in battle saved the lives of Shanahan and four of his Tasmanian troop. The right flank was under fierce assault. One group of five troopers saw their horses shot or lost - all except Bill the Bastard - he had not cut and run with the other horses. Bill stood his ground, almost as if he knew he was this quintet's last hope of escape; which indeed he was. Three troopers hurried across the sand and scrambled on top of Bill, praying he would not buck, which he always did when mounted. This time however, instead of complaining about his load Bill stood firm. The remaining two troopers balanced on a stirrup on either side of the big horse and hung on as best they could. The mighty waler dug his hooves into the soft sand, snorted and sweated in a lumbering gallop for just over a kilometre, all the while under constant fire. He carried his precious load, the heavy load of five Australian light horsemen, to safety. Any other horse would have collapsed, but not Bill! On another ocassion Shanahan was shot in the leg but kept fighting, going up and down the line until he collapsed on his horse. The loyal steed carried his rider three kilometres to the vet, who passed him on to a medic, where his leg was eventually amputated. Bill the Bastard had to be forced to leave his riders side. It was the first time the Turks were defeated in the Middle East. Bill was officially retired after the battle, he performed so well. He still saw a lot of action everyone wanted Bill. He would carry mail to the front lines, machine guns or lead the line, and was seen as a symbol of strength. The story of Bill the Bastard is the remarkable tale of a bond between a determined trooper and his stoic but cantankerous mount. They did everything together, eat, sleep and go into battle. Shanahan never poured himself a drink of water before he filled his turned up slouch hat for Bill. The pair depended on each other for their survival and trusted each other implicitly. When the chips were down, Bill always pulled through. Bill had become a legend, a symbol of the courage and unbreakable will of the Anzac mounted force. There was no other horse like Bill the Bastard. Horses can be heroes too. Bill was one of the 130,000 Australian horses which served in World War One and were never to return home. The horses were not supposed to be returned to Australia because of logistical, costs and disease risk factors. The small town of Murrumburrah in NSW is recognised as the birthplace of the Australian Light Horse in 1897. The town also features a bronze sculpture of Bill the Bastard carrying five men during the ‘Retreat at Romani’. Bill has also been immortalised in the form of a book by Roland Perry, aptly titled ‘Bill The Bastard’. Most walers were taken into the desert and shot by their riders to stop them falling into enemy hands where they'd be abused, used as beasts of burden or brutally killed for meat. It must have been shattering for them, Bill the bastard survived the war but even he was not allowed to return to Australia. He was left with villagers in Gallipoli where he died at the age of 21 in 1924. He is buried at Walkers Ridge in Gallipoli. RIP. Bill the Bastard; A loyal Australian war horse who rode with bravery and valour at Gallipoli and the desert campaigns of Egypt and Palestine.
07.01.2022 GF Pippens , GF Rivergum, GF Jazz and GF Mckenzie with Rob and Ally
07.01.2022 True Blues Q/H Ruby and G/F Drifter down on the creek today.
07.01.2022 I got this message today from a gentleman who brought a yearling filly of us a couple of years ago...................... Just got back on the filly after a 7 weeks break. . Not one foot wrong today we ever open and close gates off her. Rode straight into a dam water up to her belly. Just as if she was a 20 yrs old stock horse. Mate this horse will never be for sale or leave our place I have been breaking horses for 46 yrs. she is the best horse I ever come across
06.01.2022 Stock clearance $900. TB Drover 15 months old gelding by GF Bess
05.01.2022 Brumby feet. Anyone would think these are hoof prints of a shod horse or one that is trimmed regularly. In fact in the 3 years Gallipoli has been off park he has never had his feet trimmed. . And look at that over reach.
04.01.2022 This is True Blue Ghostgum. Rob had her in doing some work with her in the round yard. - Rob Usher
03.01.2022 More training with TB Diamantina
03.01.2022 The True Blue foals playing.
03.01.2022 All the G/F horses
01.01.2022 EOI GF Bess and her foals while been with us. All brood mares must go
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