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1-29 of 29
- Multiple teams race around the globe for $1,000,000 to 'amazing' locations.
- The Australian version of the reality/travel series where teams of people compete in a race around the world for the A$250,000 first prize.
- The comic adventures of the kids who live on Circe Island, a fishing community off the coast of Western Australia. Some kids call it Paradise, the others call it a prison and long for the mainland.
- The story of 6 friends who journey to an island off the coast of Australia for the weekend. Two of them (Emma and Harry) announce that they intend to get married, but have made no plans, nor do they have a proper license. Emma also announces that she is very ill, and all she wants is a wedding. The other four friends then try to find a way to make it all happen...
- Music Video for San Cisco's 'Magic'.
- 2001– 44mTV-PG7.7 (53)TV EpisodeOn the drive to the airport, one team picks up a hitchhiker and takes some time to conduct international relations. A rivalry between two teams starts to heat up after one duo tells the other that at the next opportunity to use the Yield they will use it against them. All teams but one team sit anxiously on their plane waiting to takeoff hoping that the one team that is straggling behind will not make it in time. Will they or will they be left far behind in last place? What should otherwise be a fun ride on a bicycle built for two turns into a heated blowup for one team?
- Billy heads to Adelaide where he meets the Aboriginal artist Jimmy Pike and a pair of hairy-nosed wombats. He then heads to Perth where he takes a ride up the Honour Avenues in Kings Park, before meeting a curious quokka on Rottnest Island. A boat trip sees him take a swim with a pod of dolphins in Rockingham, his friends and family surprise him on his 53rd birthday, and Nambung National Park gets to experience him in all his glory.
- Animal spies infiltrate unique island wild life around the world including marine iguanas, koalas, Christmas Island red crabs, lemurs, kangaroos, seals, quokkas, Komodo dragons, rockhopper penguins and Galapagos tortoises.
- During this WA leg of the race, teams travel by ferry to take a leap of faith over Rottnest Island, pay homage to a local icon and get locked up in the stocks before meeting Beau at the Pit Stop.
- The mysterious dieback of grazing pasture; A young WA family embrace farming life; Paying farmers for supporting biodiversity; Purple beehives defending against varroa mite; Promising cattle tick vaccine research.
- When we talk about environmental problems in Australia, two subjects invariably emerge at the top of the list: water and soil. In many ways, the problems we face with these two basic natural resources - such as salinity and soil degradation - are interwoven and the solutions often work in tandem as well. Many of the problems with soil and water arise from the mismatch between Australian soils, water balance and climate and the traditional European farming and grazing methods.
- If you had to name Australia�s favourite fruit it would have to be the banana. We eat millions of them every year and although we usually associate banana growing with Queensland and northern New South Wales the most productive plantations in Australia are in western Australia. The bananas from the west are grown in tightly packed plantations and as a result they are not as large as their eastern cousins but some clever marketing has turned a negative into a positive.
- When Jeannie Gunn wrote the quintessential tale of life in the top end against all odds, she called it We of the Never Never. The Northern Territory even coined the "never never" phrase to attract tourists, though for the past century it may have just as easily summed up your chances of getting to Darwin by train. It seems you should never say never. The project that has been sidetracked more often than a shunting yard loco, has finally got the greenlight and $1.2 billion to make it happen.
- One subject, which will inevitably involve farmers, is ethanol production. To create this fuel extender, farmers are needed to grow the crops from which ethanol is extracted. But as Landline found out, despite the inevitable decline of our fossil fuel resources, with few exceptions, enthusiasm for ethanol is surprisingly low-key.
- As dawn broke in the main street of Barcaldine, around 800 locals clustered to see the opening of the Queensland Biennial Festival of Music. The big moment everyone was waiting for was the world premier of the Barcaldine's very own Big Marimba Band. Around 150 kids and adults from the Barcaldine community have spent the last two months making and learning to play marimbas.
- Less than three years ago pork producers in this country were talking about the death of their industry. Rising imports from Canada and Denmark had brought growers to their knees; many forced to start killing their stock, as it was not viable to send them to market. But desperate times in another country, Malaysia, have brought a new prosperity to the pork industry that is now enjoying record prices as well as a massive jump in exports to Asia. Julia Limb looks at the changing fortunes of Australia's pig farmers.
- Hobby farmers are an integral part of rural Australia. The money they spend stocking, fencing and planting out their small holdings is very important to the towns they surround. The trouble is, systems set up to service large scale farms do not always suit small scale hobby operators. Six years ago, one New South Wales auctioneer decided the most basic system, the auction, could be modified to suit the weekend farmer.
- Although still only a relative small industry in Australia, quail farming does have big ideas. After taking a devastating blow in the export arena when Newcastle disease struck the poultry sector several times in recent years, these growers are once again looking to take their product overseas.
- Imagine a wheat crop that is drought proof, provides a return just two weeks after planting and best of all could earn nearly $800,000 per hectare. It is not a fantasy designed to torment farmers unable to even get a crop away this year. It is wheatgrass, the latest health food trend promoters claim is the new fountain of youth.
- The good news comes from Queensland where widespread rain over central and western areas of the state has been described as 'the best in years'. The rain came from the tale-end of former cyclone 'Beni'.
- Tasmania's beef producers are approaching what they admit could be a seminal moment for the industry in the island state. Despite being justifiably proud of the quality of beef produced in Tasmania, it has widely acknowledged that mainland Australia is streets ahead in just about every other facet of beef production. The question is what to do about it, the Tasmanians are not giving up. They are about to embark on an industry re-structuring, which it is hoped will give beef producers the necessary confidence in their own future.
- Kerry Lonergan spoke to olive grower and processor Mark Troy about issues facing the Australian olive industry, including the decision by Customs to drop their investigation into a request for countervailing tariffs on EU-subsidised olive oil.
- Farmers throughout the world have a history of accepting and adopting new technology as fast as it becomes available. The massive rise in food production in the last century only came about after the widespread use of new chemicals, including herbicides, pesticides and artificial fertilisers. When GM technology emerged a couple of decades back, once again many farmers saw this scientific advance as the way of the future, a method of producing more food with less chemicals. Well, that was at least partially true but only part of the story. Landline will be looking extensively at the GM experience in America, Canada and of course Australia. Those stories will feature over coming weeks. We begin the GM journey with the BBC�s comprehensive look at the history of this remarkable technology.
- 2016–202352mTV EpisodeErnie is welcomed onto Wadjemup by a Whadjuk elder, Rae gets a taste of Tassie's Tamar Valley with a wine educator and Narelda takes on a trapeze in regional Victoria.
- Bitter Harvest: Wine grape growers in Victoria and South Australia are struggling as prices hit rock bottom. Southern Gas: The coal seam gas controversy spreads to South Australia. Joel Salatin Interview: Joel Salatin is one of the world's most influential farmers. Bullocky: The Bullock Drivers League is passionate about keeping the old tradition alive.
- 2014–TV EpisodeFaulkner encounters quokkas, king skinks and Australian fur seals during his trip to Rottnest Island. On the mainland, he interacts with endangered woylies at the Western Australian Conservation Center.