Hand Cane Cutters

Landmarks and Buildings

You are welcome to stop in at the Home Hill Showgrounds to see these larger than life statues for yourself.

Completed in May 2016, the two Hand Cane Cutter sculptures represent the multicultural history of the Australian sugarcane industry. Indigenous, South Sea Islander and European Australians made an invaluable contribution to the prosperity of our sugar cane growing regions, including the Burdekin, which today produces the most sugar of any region in Australia.

With funding for the project obtained through the Federal Government’s Indigenous Language and Arts Program, the local Gudjuda Reference Group Aboriginal Corporation’s indigenous artists were mentored by Dr Farvardin Daliri OAM in designing, constructing and painting the sculptures. The sculptures are 3.5 metres high and 20 tonnes heavy, and are made from steel and cement.

Today, apart from small quantities of treated cane cut by hand for planting, sugarcane is harvested by machine.

At the Home Hill Showgrounds, the Australian Hand Cane Cutting Championships is now held each year, where this skill of a bygone era is brought back to life. These beautifully crafted statues face the paddock where the Championships take place.

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Caravan / Camper Trailer / Campervan Sites / Campsites Family Friendly

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COVID Safe

Rates

Free Entry

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Charlie

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Home Hill Swimming Pool

Home Hill Swimming Pool

Home Hill, Burdekin

Completed in May 2016, the Hand Cane Cutter statues at the Home Hill Showgrounds are a must see on your visit to the Burdekin region. One hour south of Townsville, bring your camera!

Hand Cane Cutters

Home Hill, Burdekin

The Burdekin River Bridge is a road and rail bridge which also has a pedestrian walkway. It took ten years to complete, and was opened in 1957.

Burdekin River Bridge

Home Hill, Burdekin

The Gudjuda Reference Group commissioned the large carpet snake sculpture Gubulla Munda Dreaming (2004), which was painted by aboriginal artists and stands on a sacred site, along with several plaques and a memorial stone, in Plantation Park, Ayr, North Queensland.

Gubulla Munda

Ayr, Burdekin

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