Country music. Three great country songs. Includes 'I Go A Little Crazy'. You don't have to be a Territorian to watch the video or listen to the songs. If you love Australia, or good music, it's more than likely you will appreciate these songs. First song - 'This Northern Land Of Mine' (I Go A Little Cazy) - was authored by Peter Barnes in 1989. It has a great country music feel to it. Peter went to work in Adelaide with Young & Rubicam Advertising after leaving the Northern Territory and he wrote 'This Northern Land Of Mine' (I Go A Little Cazy) while at the agency in Adelaide. Peter Barnes was appointed General Manager and Creative Director of MDA Barr Woollard Cawrse NT in 1987, with overall responsibility for improving the creative output, client base and financial performance of the agency. From a position of near closure due to previous poor management, within twelve months the agency became the leading and most influential advertising and marketing company in the...
Heres a small highlight package from our trip to King Ash Bay, Northern Territory in 2007. As you can see it truly is an an awesome fishing destination. Bring on May 2008!!!
Scott Perkins, CEO of the Northern Territory Resources Council, talks to us about the skills he'll be bringing to the council, the true potential of NT mineral resources, and his plans to overcome...
some fishing action of of the Duckboard of the mother boat we where using at Cape Jaheel at the Northern End Of Melville Island in Australia's Northern Territory
Scott Perkins, CEO of the Northern Territory Resources Council, talks to us about the skills he'll be bringing to the council, the true potential of NT mineral resources, and his plans to overcome...
When it comes to the art of making a yidaki (didgeridoo), Djalu Gurruwiwi of the Galpu clan in the Northern Territory of Australia is widely regarded as the best there is.
Before his death beside a remote Northern Territory creek bed, Harold Lasseter wrote in his diary: ‘What good a reef worth millions? I would give it all for a loaf of bread.’ Lasseter...