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A wool bale is a standard sized and weighted pack of classed wool compressed by the mechanical means of a wool press. This is the regulation required method of packaging for wool, to keep it uncontaminated and readily identifiable. A "bale of wool" is also the standard trading unit for wool on the wholesale national and international markets.
His wool was also the first to gain £100 for a single bale and he was the first Australian grazier to earn £1 for 1lb of wool (i.e. a ‘pound for pound’). His world record price of 435d, set in 1945, was recorded when two Milanese buyers competed, head-to-head, for his clip. [7]
The last big wool clip from the station was in 1953 with 2,100 wool bales being produced. Toorale was owned by the Berawinnia Pastoral Company and had run flocks of between 50,000 and 100,000 sheep for the last several years. Much of the property was then resumed for soldier settlement. [10]
Concentrating a sufficient number of bales of all wools intended for public sale in one location, allowing owners to compare the condition of their clips and facilitate ready and rapid examination and purchase. Attracting buyers from various parties by offering a substantial quantity and quality of wool at each sale
The wool clip for 1914 was 316 bales of greasy wool and 16 bales of scoured wool. [13] The property was carrying 17,000 sheep and occupied an area of 800,000 acres (323,749 ha). [10] In 1918 some 51,000 sheep were shorn, followed by 22,000 in 1919 then 11,000 in 1920 and only 9,000 in 1921.
The station had a satisfactory clip later in 1928 with 8,000 sheep and lambs being shorn to produce 113 bales of wool. [9] When advertised in 1929 the property had 29 wells equipped with mills and troughing and was subdivided into 21 paddocks fenced with over 874 miles (1,407 km) of fencing. Cogla also had 14 room homestead, another 7 rooms for ...
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In 1911 the station was carrying a flock of 98,000 sheep and yielded a clip of 1419 bales of wool. [2] The property and surrounding areas were severely flooded in 1914, and again in 1938 resulting in the death of a former jockey, William Skinner, who drowned in the flooded Nerrima River. [6]