Queensland Country Hour ABC Podcasts
-
- Economia
Explore what it takes to put food on plates around the world, with our team of specialist reporters covering the big issues of rural life.
-
The pieces of Annie Henwood's mind
Growing up on a cotton farm in southern Queensland, Annie Henwood is no stranger to how tough life, and the people, on the land can be.
So, when she had the courage to voice the parts of her own experience that others fear to share, she used it to soften them up to the idea of talking more through her podcast Pieces of the Mind. -
Invasive fire ants have been found in the Murray-Darling Basin, and it's a big problem.
As the number of nests found at Oakey is rising, but its rising rivers nearby that have experts truly worried.
For months, the Condamine-Ballone river system has been in-and-out of major flood following heavy rainfall in January and February. It's not much of a problem for residents used to it, but that was before they new fire ants were in the area.
The crafty critters can build rafts to travel on flooded rivers, and finding them in one of the largest catchments inside Australia's largest river system could have devastating consequences for everyone. -
Would you eat dinosaur food?
A nutritious native nut once eaten by dinosaurs has huge potential to be part of the booming Indigenous bush food industry.
-
Clean energy, planning pitfalls, and the young people flocking to mining.
Queensland remains one of Australia's largest coal states, and young people are flocking to mining for well-paying jobs in a cost of living crisis.
Ambitious new emissions reduction targets are now set in law, but without the the people, the land and the planning approvals in place can it truly decarbonise?
As farmers stare down significant long-term threats to farm productivity, resilience and sustainability, Australia's top scientists say now is the time to change -
People are still keen to be farmers, even when they know it's tough.
From natural disasters, to poor prices from retailers and world markets, there are plenty of reasons not to become a farmer.
But as some veteran producers retire and others exit altogether, there are plenty of keen beans ready to take up the job. -
From droving cattle on horseback to driverless trucks, freight has come a long way.
The term 'horse-power' may have come about as a marketing tool to sell steam engines in the 1770s, but for the biennial Eidsvold Cattle Drive in country Queensland it's still literal. Using horses to move cattle into town, they're raising money for charity at the same time.
In age of urbanisation it could be easy to forget the role horses play in our food supply chain, or the careers on offer working with them, like becoming an outback horse trainer.
On the eve of a planned trial of driverless trucks, it shows just how far moving goods around Australia has come.