Bush Love

The Monthly
May 2010

In retrospect, we had been adequately warned. Days before we arrived at Wooroolin’s Peanut Pullers and Backfatters Ball — an annual Bachelor & Spinsters’ event in rural Queensland — I’d spoken to one of its organisers over the phone. “B&S balls used to be a big thing in rural areas,” Jodie Butcher told me, “so all the single farmers and farmer’s daughters could meet someone. It was a proper sit-down meal in a hall, then you’d have a dance.” When asked exactly how B&S balls had changed, Jodie laughed. “Over time,” she said, “I guess it’s gotten a little bit … feral.”

As such, the invitation for Backfatters featured a sketchy illustration of a giant peanut happily having sex with a pig up the rear. I understood where the committee had gotten ‘peanut-pullers’ from: Wooroolin, a township with a population of roughly 200 people, lies just outside of Kingaroy, and the entire region is known as Australia’s peanut farming capital. ‘Back-fatter’, I discovered, refers to the local piggeries. Jodie told me that a sow at the end of her breeding cycle will become so enormous that locals call them backfatters: “It’s the committee taking the piss — that all we’ve got out here are peanut pullers and backfatters.”


Tweet

Browse archive by publication

ABC The Drum Blog Crikey Financial Review Frankie Good Weekend Kill Your Darlings New Matilda Qweekend Selected Works Smith Journal Sunday Life The Monthly

Recent work

  • Nude Yoga

    Good Weekend
    June 2014
  • The Business of Pleasure | Male Escorts

    Good Weekend
    February 2014
  • The Other Faces of Meth

    Good Weekend
    November 2013
  • Eddie Perfect Unleashes the Beast

    The Monthly
    October 2013
  • Master of Mellow | Singer-songwriter Jack Johnson

    Good Weekend
    September 2013
  • Comeback Trail | On the Road with Pauline Hanson

    Good Weekend
    July 2013