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Episode 6: Gold Fever (Lasseter's Reef) Episode 7: The Passionate Prussian (Ludwig Leichhardt) Episode 8: Into The Vilest Country (Edmund Kennedy and Jackey Jackey in the Cape York Peninsula) A DVD containing the complete series was released in 2010, called Bush Tucker Man: The Collection, [12] [13] re-released in 2019. [14]
Gold Fever is a documentary television series airing on The Outdoor Channel since 1996. It is hosted by Tom Massie and features some of the best places where gold can be found. The program is sponsored by the Gold Prospectors Association of America , an organization dedicated to prospecting .
Gold Fever may refer to: Gold fever, or gold rush, a heightened migration to an area by people seeking fortune in gold mining; Gold Fever (American TV series), a documentary television series airing on The Outdoor Channel; Gold Fever (British TV series), a BBC documentary; Gold Fever, a 1952 American Western film
“That gold’s in the ground and we’ve gotta go get it,” Ness, 43, says. “A big chunk of gold in your hand — there's something powerful about it.” Schnabel adds, “It's just gold fever.
It was launched on April Fool's Day (April 1st) 1994. The network can be viewed on multiple platforms including high definition, video on demand as well as on its own website. In 2013, Outdoor Channel was acquired by Kroenke Sports Enterprises. [1]
The New Inventors (2004–2011) Next Stop Hollywood (2013) New Look at New Guinea (1959) Not Quite Art (2007 on ABC1, 2008 on ABC2) On the Road; Open Learning (1992–2001) Operatunity Oz (2006) Outback ER (2015) Outback House (2005) Outback Kids (2011) Palazzo di Cozzo: The Australian Dream. Italian Style. (2022) Parental Guidance Recommended ...
It’s a gold rushlet so far: lots of wishful thinking that half-forgotten old mines still have new gold to yield up a dozen or so decades after the first ore was dredged out there.
The film is set during the Western Australian gold rushes of the 1890s, and its characters represent some of the "Afghan" cameleers (who actually came from India, Persia, and other parts of the Middle East, and belonged to Islamic, Sikh and Hindu faiths [1]) who brought their camel trains to help open up the Australian outback from the mid-19th century.