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Pardoo Station is a
pastoral lease A pastoral lease, sometimes called a pastoral run, is an arrangement used in both Australia and New Zealand where government-owned Crown land is leased out to graziers for the purpose of livestock grazing on rangelands. Australia Pastoral lease ...
, formerly a sheep station, and now a cattle station approximately east of Port Hedland and north of Marble Bar, in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.


Description

The property used to be about in size. It is on the western end of the
Great Sandy Desert The Great Sandy Desert is an interim Australian bioregion,IBRA Version 6.1
data
where it meets the Indian Ocean at the southern end of the Eighty Mile Beach. Mount Goldsworthy, located on the south western side of the lease, is the site of the first
iron ore Iron ores are rocks and minerals from which metallic iron can be economically extracted. The ores are usually rich in iron oxides and vary in color from dark grey, bright yellow, or deep purple to rusty red. The iron is usually found in the fo ...
mine in the Pilbara. The Pardoo iron ore mine is located in the region, and shares the station's name. The station was sold in late 2014 by the Rogers family to a Singaporean-based investor, Bruce Cheung, for 13.5 million. Cheung's company, the Pardoo Beef Corporation, appointed Eric Golangco as the general manager. At this time the property was running 5,700 head of cattle on . Centre-pivot irrigation is being used to produce extra hay for stock. The property also has of ocean frontage and has a 145-bay caravan park tourist operation.


History

Mr S. Anderson was the proprietor of the station in 1892. Heavy rains in April of that year led to heavy stock losses with around 100 cattle, 1,500 sheep and 30 horses being lost in the deluge. In May of the same year he was thrown from his horse and sustained severe injuries, which resulted in him being taken to Roebourne for hospitalisation. Seven Aboriginal Australians were caught killing and stealing sheep from the station in 1893. They were sentenced to four years hard labour and eighteen lashes with the
cat o' nine tails The cat o' nine tails, commonly shortened to the cat, is a type of multi-tailed whip or flail that originated as an implement for severe physical punishment, notably in the Royal Navy and British Army, and as a judicial punishment in Britain ...
. In 1913 the station had an estimated flock of 20,000 sheep, which were to be shorn using the 12 stands in the shearing shed in July of that year. The area was flooded following heavy rains in 1929. Frank Snellgrove Thompson owned the station from at least 1929 until his death in 1937. His son, Frank Finlayson Thompson, took over control of the property until at least 1951, in addition to the family merino stud property ''Nardlah'' near Broomehill in the Great Southern region of the state. In 1951 a seventy-year-old man, Hans Pederson, fell from a windmill tower. The Royal Flying Doctor Service sent a plane from Port Hedland but it arrived too late and Pederson had died. Pardoo was an outcamp of De Grey Station but became a separate entity owned by the Thompson family until 1963 when Frank Thompson sold it to Leslie (Les) Schubert. Schubert describes the history of the station in his book ''Wiping Out the Tracks – The Northern Odyssey''. In November 1965 Schubert swapped Pardoo along with a cash adjustment of $120,000 for Louisa Downs and Bohemia Downs stations in the
Kimberley Kimberly or Kimberley may refer to: Places and historical events Australia * Kimberley (Western Australia) ** Roman Catholic Diocese of Kimberley * Kimberley Warm Springs, Tasmania * Kimberley, Tasmania a small town * County of Kimberley, a ...
region. Karl Stein took over the station in January 1966. Sometime before 1977 Karl Stein retired and sold Pardoo to Russel Peake. The Leeds family purchased Pardoo from Peake and then sold the lease for Pardoo to Graeme and Judith Rogers. Pardoo is operating under the Crown Lease numbers CL694-1967 and CL194-1983 and has the associated Land Act numbers LA3114/446 and LA398/718. The station is estimated to have a size of and in 2012 was stocked with approximately 7,000 Santa Gertrudis cattle.


Tropical cyclones

In 2012 the station lay directly in the path of Cyclone Lua and most staff were evacuated to Port Hedland to wait the storm out. The Anderson family and two station hands remained at the property. The area was hit by winds and heavy rain, with many trees uprooted; the roadhouse owner, Janet Robb, described the property as looking like "an absolute warzone". Pardoo also took the brunt of Cyclone Rusty in February 2013, recording of rain in 24 hours along with strong winds. Stock was killed from hypothermia and the homestead was damaged by the category four cyclone. Ten years later in April 2023
Cyclone Ilsa Severe Tropical Cyclone Ilsa was a powerful tropical cyclone that struck Western Australia in April 2023. The sixth named storm, and the fifth severe tropical cyclone of the 2022–23 Australian region cyclone season, Ilsa formed from a tropi ...
passed directly over Pardoo as a Category 5 storm, causing over $4 million (AUD) of damage to the nearby roadhouse, tearing roofs off buildings and overturning road trucks. Pardoo's new manager Scott Fraser had been there three weeks when Ilsa hit. Pardoo had 20 centre-pivot irrigation plants, used to grass feed the mainly Wagyu cattle. These were tied down ahead of the cyclone, but all but one was trashed. Additionally, many station sheds and other buildings were destroyed. The financial loss was estimated at $25m.Cyclone Ilsa clean-up continues on billion-dollar Pardoo Station after 'mind-boggling' damage
Michelle Stanley, ABC News Online, 2023-06-15


Climate


References


Further reading

*Schubert, Leslie A.(1994), ''Wiping Out the Tracks – The Northern Odyssey'': A Family Biography & Social Commentary, *Schubert, Leslie A.(1996), ''Kimberley Dreams & Realities'': An Objective Study of the effects on Part Aboriginals forcibly educated in the Twentieth Century & the Tragedy of the Uneducated Indigenous. {{Stations of the Pilbara Western Australia Homesteads in Western Australia Stations in the Pilbara