The stories of fifty-five, unique, Gulf of Carpentaria women, have been shared with the wider community after Gulf Women, was launched in Burketown on Saturday.
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The women featured in the book, live and work on the vast cattle stations of remote north-west Queensland as owners, managers or stock and station workers. The other authors live on country, work in businesses, tourism, education, health and aviation, or live and work on fishing boats out in the Gulf.
The roots of Gulf Women are in Gregory where the book began: a tiny township of about 40 people, 400 kilometres north from Mount Isa, and 120 kilometres south from Burketown on the Gulf. The heart of Gregory is its women.
Author Bron Blake, facilitated the Gulf Women anthology. She and the contributors agreed that all work would be voluntary so all profits could return to the Gregory region for community projects.
“As their editor, I feel closely connected to these women who gifted me windows into their worlds so different from most, and was fortunate enough to be told the story of their lives, warts, joys, terrors and all,” Ms Blake said.
“Gulf women are self-sufficient, generous, and cope with almost anything that life and the environment throws at them; floods, drought, sickness, emergencies; all the difficulties that come with running a cattle station and its staff, a fishing business, a family being raised and educated, or an enterprise far from anywhere.
“They are forthright, outspoken and don’t take kindly to being told by outsiders what they can and cannot do, should or shouldn’t think. But what they can do is love their soul country, manage the challenges of isolation, the Wet, and the totally unexpected.”
This powerful book gives women a voice to tell their own stories of managing distant stations and stock camps, handling terrible accidents, floods, bushfires, and killing droughts. Of nurses, teachers, mothers (food and essential supplies ordered from far away centres: delivery weeks or months), rearing families and educating their children through Mount Isa School of the Air.
There are stories of new mothers on properties isolated and inaccessible for months in the Wet, women giving birth at home with only neighbours to assist, reminiscences from last century and World War II, and accounts of fishing in the Gulf in sometimes unimaginable conditions.
“The women told me that there was nothing to write about. So ordinary it’s boring and just what you do, just life.”
“What a rich vein of gold we tapped into, and in writing their stories, I hope these women see in print, for all time, just how extraordinary they are. How proud we are of them.”
Gulf Women was launched in conjunction with the Morning Glory Festival on the weeken