Excerpt from The Agricultural Gazette of New South Wales
While we can never hope to help all those interested in stock and wheat growing, it will be possible to help hundreds of those who are already on the soil, as well as putting thousands more on smaller holdings, varying from 10 to 100 acres, on areas of which size, with the aid of water, they will be able to make very comfortable livings, provided always that we can conserve a little of the rain which falls, and put it on the land at a reasonable cost. Owing to the very flat nature of most of our country there are very few places where this can be done by gravitation; there are, however, many places where, by the use of the most up-to-date pumps, water can be lifted from our rivers at a fairly reasonable cost. Of course, wherever pumping has to be undertaken, the expense of fuel is an item for consideration; so that wherever it is possible to formulate a scheme of irrigation where the water can be made to gravitate from its source, even though the initial cost may be ever so much greater, it will in the end be by far the most economical.
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