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Raw hide: rodeos in Mt Isa

Pack your RM Williams shirt and your cowboy boots, make sure you’ve practised your swagger, and head on over to Mount Isa’s rodeo.

Going to Mount Isa, the far flung part of outback Queensland, you’ll have the most fun if you meet the locals, really get into the biggest event on their calendar, and dance the night away in a big marquee – right after the belt buckle awards have been handed out.

Before you throw yourself into some bull action, there’s a load of things going on so that you can immerse yourself in true Mount Isa hospitality. The fairground beside the rodeo is like a crazy 1980s Western film, with high-flying fluoro amusement rides, chicken and chip stands, fairy floss, slurpies, logo stickers that haven’t changed in 30 years, dodgems and, of course, show bags, all on a big patch of red dirt and tumbleweed below the hills of Isa.

An hour at the fair is enough to have you heading straight for the big golden arches for a well-earned break, and I don’t mean Maccas. We’re talking XXXX, and there’s an enormous bus devoted to it, with a Western-style wooden balcony and a stereo system pumping out country classics.

There’s a big wooden bar, performance stage, a massive flat screen and a beer garden. It’s heaven on wheels, but sorry ladies, there’s no wine on a XXXX bus. Which is all the more reason to head off to where the real action is: the stadium. 

Bucking bulls

Take your seat and, from the moment the first gate flies open, you’ll understand why so many people are rodeo fans. Out charges a bull with the rider hanging on for dear life. Eight seconds is the time a rider needs to stay on a bull to receive marks in any rodeo event, and those eight seconds seem like an eternity, with every second worth watching.

But it’s not all about bull riding. Barrel racing (women racing horses in figure eights around barrels), bucking broncos, clowns and comedians also keep young and old entertained.

As dusk falls, it’s a great time to head into town and visit an institution that was created with the birth of this rowdy yet charming town: the Isa Hotel.

The sprawling hotel has something for everyone, with an outdoor deck area, a restaurant serving fine food and great wine, a real back-to-the-roots pub area, and even a dance floor if you feel like kicking on.

And while the rodeo is on, things do kick on. In fact, the hotel leaves a packet of earplugs next to each bed with a polite note: ‘we hope you enjoy a great night’s sleep, but pop these in, as people get noisy during rodeo time.’

Dig deep

Outback at Isa is a cultural and interpretive centre that you can’t leave Mount Isa without visiting, complete with a mine that has been created to replicate a real working Mount Isa mine.

At the Hard Times Mine, visitors pull on overalls and hardhats, meet guides who have really been working the mines of Mount Isa, and go underground.

Did you ever wonder how heavy one of those drills that makes holes for dynamite is? You can hold one, and then be thankful you never have to lift something that weighty again. On this tour, you can experience what it's like to have a job in one of the most discussed industries today and you can ask all the questions you want.

Travel Guide

Get there:

Qantas flies from Sydney to Mount Isa via Brisbane, Skytrans flies from Cairns to Mount Isa directly, and Airnorth flies directly from Darwin to Mount Isa. If you’re on a road trip heading up or down the east coast, Mount Isa is a 10-hour journey from Townsville.

See:

Mount Isa underground hospital is an incredible museum based in a hospital that was dug out in preparation for possible Japanese invasion after Darwin was bombed in 1942. A small aboveground cottage houses all manner of interesting medical equipment from past eras, some as intriguing as it is scary!

Stay:

Stylish rooms at the Red Earth Hotel have comfy beds decked out in lovely linen, as well as all mod cons.
W: www.redearth-hotel.com.au