About This Book
Two brothers travel from their family station to inspect a tract offered for pastoral occupation, with their father prepared to equip them with sheep if the land proves suitable. The narrative interweaves travel with vivid descriptions of colonial geography and landscape, from coastal settlement and penal origins to the Main Range and the fertile tablelands that become pastoral country. The preface and narration contest metropolitan misconceptions about colonial life and rebut disparaging accounts by transient writers. Close attention is paid to settler society and material culture, portraying bush towns, hotels, stores, homesteads, and slab huts and the uneasy mix of refinement and roughness, while focusing on land, settlement, and pastoral enterprise.





