While Covid confines humans to their homes, insects are chauffeured around the country in Australia’s largest livestock movement

It’s 5am on a frigid August morning and Trevor Monson is at the wheel of his 16-wheeler truck on the road out of the Riverina town of Griffith, New South Wales. It’s still pitch black, his headlights searching down long kilometres of straight roads.

Trevor and his son Jonathan have been on the road since 11pm the night before, when they set off from their home town of Robinvale in north-western Victoria. Pulling into an already-heaving truckers’ and tradies’ pitstop for a breakfast of coffee and cheese sandwiches, they check the precious cargo boxed up in hives piled high on the truck. The inhabitants are still snoozing, cuddled up in clusters to protect themselves from the windchill. They’re seasoned travellers by now, having spent the past five weeks journeying from Queensland to Victoria to NSW.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Team GB Olympic sailing team eye record haul with more medals secured

Finn defending champion Scott in gold medal position Nacra pair Gimson and…

Northern Ireland: what does the new post-Brexit deal mean?

Trade rules aim to alleviate DUP opposition to the Irish Sea border…

Yemen war: prisoners freed in huge cross-border exchange

Second day of prisoner swaps involving nearly 900 detainees comes amid peace…

’No one knew her’: Emma Raducanu, youthful freedom and US Open glory | Tumaini Carayol

Last year she was kicked off a practice court in a New…