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1-26 of 26
- A divorced couple teams up and travels to Bali to stop their daughter from making the same mistake they think they made 25 years ago.
- In 1994, seventeen-year-old Isabel Baker was murdered. The crime shocked the small town of Ashford and devastated the Australian South Sea Islander community of Elizabeth.
- A seaplane pilot flying in the tropics finds herself falling for the man sent to sink her business.
- Experience the thrill of the chase, and the hunt. Wildlife expert Rob Bredl risks life and limb to graphically illustrate nature's raw side, focusing on the carefully honed killer instincts predators utilize to capture their prey.
- A musician struggling with writer's block receives a curious package that inspires him to travel to an exotic tropical location to reconnect with his band. With the help of a mysterious Shaman, the band host wild psychedelic party.
- For the resilient crew of the Clipper Race courage is contagious. It's regarded as the toughest endurance challenge on the planet. And yet it's undertaken by amateurs and novices: Corinthian adventurers who receive intensive training before embarking on the world's biggest ocean race - with around 700 crew in twelve identical 70-foot yachts putting up to 50,000 miles under their keels. This award winning 7-part TV series of the tenth edition of the biennial Clipper Race, follows the teams through their highs and lows as they take on Mother Nature in a series of 14 races around the globe. From the very first race to the heroes' welcome eleven months later, crew from all walks of life face tough challenges. Discover what it takes to complete this huge feat of human endeavour; what motivates crew and how they cope under pressure. Find out how these intrepid people achieve something remarkable in The Race of Their Lives aboard the unique Clipper Round the World Yacht Race.
- 2019– 1hTV Episode
- As a time capsule is opened, a secret is unearthed, and it puts detective James Cormack on the trail of a murderer from a 1994 case that was never solved.
- Cormack listens to the dead.
- Something is rotten in the state of Ashford.
- The dead speak louder.
- Power silences the dead.
- The powerless fight back.
- Strawberry ice-creams and herb bouquets save two farms from adversity; The town that took in and supported out-of-work backpackers during COVID; The cafe owner using aquaponics to grow his own salads.
- If you had to name Australia�s favourite fruit it would have to be the banana. We eat millions of them every year and although we usually associate banana growing with Queensland and northern New South Wales the most productive plantations in Australia are in western Australia. The bananas from the west are grown in tightly packed plantations and as a result they are not as large as their eastern cousins but some clever marketing has turned a negative into a positive.
- When Jeannie Gunn wrote the quintessential tale of life in the top end against all odds, she called it We of the Never Never. The Northern Territory even coined the "never never" phrase to attract tourists, though for the past century it may have just as easily summed up your chances of getting to Darwin by train. It seems you should never say never. The project that has been sidetracked more often than a shunting yard loco, has finally got the greenlight and $1.2 billion to make it happen.
- Recently Landline brought you a story on goat meat - Now here's a story about new hope for goat fleece.
- It's been said that at its peak, Melbourne's wool stockpile alone would have filled the Melbourne Cricket Ground three times over. Aided by a low Australian dollar and a recovering wool market, nationally six hundred thousand stockpile bales have been cleared since the start of the year. It's ten years since the wool reserve price scheme collapsed leaving 4.7 million bales in storage so the end of the stockpile, not only marks a major milestone it also removes a major millstone from around the wool industry's neck.
- Australian broadacre farmers have justifiably earned an international reputation for being among the most efficient and innovative primary producers in the world. This is due in no small part to their uptake of new technology. What's not always appreciated is that our agricultural engineers are responsible for many of those bright ideas from the stump jump plough through to precision farming equipment. In fact, when it comes to the development of GPS-guidance for farm machinery, the so-called "hands-free" steering systems, Australia's now the acknowledged world leader.
- Salinity has been identified as probably the biggest environmental issue in Australia today, but in Western Australia it's been part of the landscape for decades. A combination of clearing and the unique system of paeleo channels beneath the Western Australian wheat belt have resulted in 8 per cent of arable land there going saline. Ironically, the State with the most experience at tackling the problem and the biggest immediate need of help, is the only one in Australia yet to secure any of the Federal Government's $700 million under the National Action Plan for Salinity.
- The fine balancing act between domestic politics and international trade has again come into sharp focus this week over sugar. On the one hand Canberra has been promoting the merits of its latest rescue package for canegrowers while our trade minister challenges the fairness of Europe doing much the same sort of thing for its farmers. There is certainly a strong view that if you can't beat them... join them. But long-term the industry might need to take a serious look at alternative markets for sugar cane, like fuel ethanol and bioplastics.