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Keeping up with the Joneses is an Australian reality television series that follows the life of a family on a cattle station—Coolibah Station—600 km south-west of Darwin, Northern Territory. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The show follows the daily lives of the titular Jones family—father Milton and mother Cristina—and their staff as they muster cattle ...
The world's largest cattle station, Marianne Station, has been owned for generations by the Lawson family dynasty. [1] It becomes a prize to be sought after by rival cattle station families, various gangsters, Australian Aboriginal elders, and mining magnates, when patriarch Colin Lawson's favored son, Daniel, dies after a suspicious riding accident.
Can we interest you in a Yellowstone-like generational ranch drama from a land down under? Well, say g’day to Territory. Netflix has unveiled a trailer for the six-part Australian series ...
Back to our cattle, heading through the hills and valleys to get branded. Cowboys discover stillborn bison, meaning that the disease brucellosis is present, threatening the ranch’s cattle and ...
Each series (save the first) has taken place at a public living history site that provides external in-period experts, experience, and flavour. The Wartime Farm series includes conversations with men and women who remember the time. All were produced by David Upshal for Lion Television.
Television episodes about livestock, domesticated animals raised in an agricultural setting to produce labor and commodities such as meat, eggs, milk, fur, leather, and wool. The term is sometimes used to refer solely to those that are bred for consumption, while other times it refers only to farmed ruminants, such as cattle, sheep and goats.
Television shows about agriculture, the practice of cultivating plants and livestock. The major agricultural products can be broadly grouped into foods, fibers, fuels, and raw materials (such as rubber). Food classes include cereals , vegetables, fruits, cooking oils, meat, milk, eggs, and fungi.