Bush Bashers Len Beadell
Bush Bashers Len Beadell front cover used secondhand nonfiction book
Bush Bashers back cover used nonfiction second hand book

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Bush Bashers

Author: Len Beadell
$51.95 5195
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Book Title
Bush Bashers
Author
Len Beadell
Book Condition
GOOD - small amount of binding cloth can be seen between pages 52 & 53 and 84 & 85 - no loose pages
ISBN
9780851791531
Book Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Rigby Limited
Year Published
1971 (First Edition)
Bush Bashers continues the story of Len Beadell and his "gunbarrel road construction party" who made a network of 4,000 miles of the loneliest roads in the world. They were built to open up three quarters of a million square miles of almost unknown wilderness to an Australia-wide survey. In this book, he tells the story of the second 1,000-mile road across Australia; which was driven through the Victoria Desert, and of the survey and construction of the only road which runs diagonally across north-western South Australia. The work went on for years, through almost impenetrable mulga scrub and over sand ridges which had stopped everything but camels until the bulldozers came. The construction team worked in all weathers from below freezing point to above century heat, and for much of the time relied for their lives upon Len Beadell's skill in carrying out astronomical observations - the only means of finding their way through the desert. For five months, the youngest member of the party was the author's five-month-old daughter, during the period in which she and his wife camped with him in the desert. She was the only white baby who ever lived in this inhospitable territory, and her stay there is commemorated by the "Connie Sue Highway"; a 400-mile stretch of road from the Warburton Ranges to Rawlinna on the Nullarbor, built by the "bush bashers" during that period. Despite all the hardships and difficulties, there was still a lighter side to the projects. In the same style which made his first two books so successful, Len Beadell covers all the human and humorous aspects of a memorable endeavour.

Bush Bashers continues the story of Len Beadell and his "gunbarrel road construction party" who made a network of 4,000 miles of the loneliest roads in the world. They were built to open up three quarters of a million square miles of almost unknown wilderness to an Australia-wide survey.

In this book, he tells the story of the second 1,000-mile road across Australia; which was driven through the Victoria Desert, and of the survey and construction of the only road which runs diagonally across north-western South Australia. The work went on for years, through almost impenetrable mulga scrub and over sand ridges which had stopped everything but camels until the bulldozers came. The construction team worked in all weathers from below freezing point to above century heat, and for much of the time relied for their lives upon Len Beadell's skill in carrying out astronomical observations - the only means of finding their way through the desert.

For five months, the youngest member of the party was the author's five-month-old daughter, during the period in which she and his wife camped with him in the desert. She was the only white baby who ever lived in this inhospitable territory, and her stay there is commemorated by the "Connie Sue Highway"; a 400-mile stretch of road from the Warburton Ranges to Rawlinna on the Nullarbor, built by the "bush bashers" during that period.

Despite all the hardships and difficulties, there was still a lighter side to the projects. In the same style which made his first two books so successful, Len Beadell covers all the human and humorous aspects of a memorable endeavour.

Bush Bashers continues the story of Len Beadell and his "gunbarrel road construction party" who made a network of 4,000 miles of the loneliest roads in the world. They were built to open up three quarters of a million square miles of almost unknown wilderness to an Australia-wide survey.

In this book, he tells the story of the second 1,000-mile road across Australia; which was driven through the Victoria Desert, and of the survey and construction of the only road which runs diagonally across north-western South Australia. The work went on for years, through almost impenetrable mulga scrub and over sand ridges which had stopped everything but camels until the bulldozers came. The construction team worked in all weathers from below freezing point to above century heat, and for much of the time relied for their lives upon Len Beadell's skill in carrying out astronomical observations - the only means of finding their way through the desert.

For five months, the youngest member of the party was the author's five-month-old daughter, during the period in which she and his wife camped with him in the desert. She was the only white baby who ever lived in this inhospitable territory, and her stay there is commemorated by the "Connie Sue Highway"; a 400-mile stretch of road from the Warburton Ranges to Rawlinna on the Nullarbor, built by the "bush bashers" during that period.

Despite all the hardships and difficulties, there was still a lighter side to the projects. In the same style which made his first two books so successful, Len Beadell covers all the human and humorous aspects of a memorable endeavour.