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Travel to Australia, and watch this real life documentary, of people mining the Opal gemstone.

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00:00On Outback Opal Hunters.
00:03Maybe let's put Opal just right there,
00:05if we can get the excavator through her.
00:07Cold's up, reunites with partner Greg and pilot Stoney,
00:12in one last push to find Opal before summer heat ends the season.
00:18It looks like she's running hot.
00:20Maybe the motor's getting sick, I don't know.
00:23I think that bucket's stuck.
00:25Because it's so hot, it's not got the pulling power
00:27to get it over the top once it heats up.
00:29The Cheels struggle with the extremes of the Outback.
00:33The steering itself, it's smashed.
00:35Very frustrating.
00:36Threatening the final days of their season.
00:38We just didn't need this today, you know.
00:40If they've left their tools here, they're coming back here.
00:43After weeks of poachers threatening his livelihood...
00:47The pick handle ain't much good against the shotgun.
00:50..Bushman Rod Manning battles to drive out thieves from his mine.
00:54Hey, you thieving bastard, yeah, run!
01:00Oh, yeah.
01:04And fancy clothes.
01:18This year's been doing a lot of solo missions,
01:22prospecting, looking at new country.
01:25You've just got to be extra careful when you're by yourself.
01:28If you hurt yourself, you've got no-one to help you.
01:31There's no room for error.
01:34It's the final sweltering weeks of the opal season
01:38in Australia's hottest year on record.
01:41Unworkable temperatures of 47 degrees Celsius are about to hit.
01:46The clock's ticking.
01:48There's places to go and I'm not there yet.
01:51I've still got to dig a bit of ground.
01:53I definitely need a payday.
01:55This car's having a bit of trouble.
01:57It'll be good to find five grand, get a set of teeth
02:00so I've got a smile again and can eat steak.
02:03It's good when you've got a good crew.
02:05You know, it's a hard job to do by yourself.
02:08You know, in some ways, it's nearly impossible.
02:14Hey, how are you? Hi, Carl.
02:16Good, mate, how are you going? Good to see you, Dave.
02:18How are you? Good on you. Good to see you, mate.
02:20After downing mining tools for most of the season,
02:24opal hunter Greg Garan and his sister Margie
02:27are back to join forces with Cobb.
02:30I had a bit of a late start to the year
02:32cos I had a pretty hard run last year.
02:34I had about five months off, cut a heap of opal.
02:37Now it's time to go digging.
02:41Oh, look at that!
02:43Queensland boulder opal, mate. Not bad, eh?
02:46Last season saw the end of a successful mining run
02:50with former partner Aaron Grotchen.
02:52I don't know. You don't know much, do you?
02:55People can change when opal comes.
02:58There was a bit of a disagreement
03:00and he told me to get me off his lease
03:02and that's exactly what I've done.
03:06You see that line there? This is from the seismic data.
03:09Yes.
03:10Greg and Cobb have teamed up
03:12to dig on a huge 10-square-kilometre exploration permit,
03:16the NOB.
03:18We have an exploration permit here of four sub-blocks
03:22and by the end of the year we need to drop two off,
03:25so we're going to go to a few places and dig them
03:28and see if it's viable to put leases down.
03:31It's worth having a try here
03:33because we know opal has come out in this area
03:36by a few different parties that have dug it.
03:39They have less than a week
03:41before summer temperatures end their season
03:43and they're forced to abandon their mission
03:45to discover signs of new opal ground.
03:48There might be a few hard lumps in amongst there,
03:50but you've got a big excavator, we can only give it a try.
03:53While Greg has the big machinery to dig,
03:56he's relying on Cole's expertise to pinpoint opal.
04:00It's been a while since I've worked with Cole.
04:02He is a professor of opal.
04:04He's been studying mapping and imagery
04:07for the last 25 years, I don't know,
04:09and he's getting close to hitting the nail right on the head.
04:13Greg's sister, Opal De La Margie,
04:16will sell whatever boulder opal they find
04:19worth up to $20,000 a gram.
04:22When you've got bills to pay and everything else,
04:24that's the sort of stuff you want to have,
04:26but we've got a bit of ground to get through before we get there.
04:31Critical to giving the team a competitive edge
04:34is an eye in the sky.
04:36Completing the team,
04:38helicopter cattle musterer and opal miner Stoney Kane.
04:43You getting in?
04:45Zip belt on.
04:47I've been mushering cattle in the helicopter
04:49for 19 years now or something,
04:51but I'm sort of bloody over it, eh?
04:53It's donors, and not only that, but I've got a little boy now.
04:56He's about two.
04:58They're asleep in the morning when you go to work
05:00and they're asleep when you get home at night.
05:02All right, well, Dad's got to go to work.
05:04No.
05:05And they bloody grow up without you.
05:07You don't get much of a family life, eh?
05:09Have a good day.
05:12He'll be back.
05:14I sort of wouldn't mind kicking back a bit on the flying,
05:17doing a bit less flying and doing a bit more opal mining.
05:22I've done a bit of mining with Greg for, oh, six or seven years,
05:26and over the years I've sort of taught myself
05:28to read the ground from the helicopter,
05:30as, you know, like, you need the faults and the changes in the ground
05:33for the opal to form.
05:35That sort of gives you a bit of an idea to go to have a look.
05:38When you break that rock and it's bloody full of colour,
05:41it's an amazing rush. It's hard to explain.
05:43This mark here is a big fault that's marked on the seismic survey.
05:47And bang, that's why the opal's there.
05:49It's the underlying feeder.
05:51I reckon it looks good, that ground. Let's go and get some opal, mate.
05:55Stoney's first task is to help Cole locate fault lines
05:59where millions of years ago
06:01groundwater deposited silica in ironstone rock,
06:04forming opal.
06:06There's a couple of bits of flyover here, mate.
06:08We might see a bit of colour.
06:10You can see them faults coming in there, hey,
06:12like in a vegetation line.
06:15Oh, look, there's some really interesting stuff here.
06:18That white staining all over the rock,
06:20maybe that's good opal just right there
06:22if we can get the excavator through it.
06:24Yeah. That looks good, mate, hey?
06:36The course of the drought,
06:37we've been getting bloody terrible dust storms.
06:40We got a real bad one last night about 12 o'clock
06:43and everything's covered in dust today.
06:47It makes a mess and you can hardly breathe.
06:51Bushman Rod Manning is racing to reach his season target
06:55in the final scorching days of the mining season.
06:59It's a bugger for the heap because, you know,
07:01yesterday was nearly 50.
07:03When you get that layer of dust, it traps the heat in,
07:07so it just makes it real humid and real bloody hot
07:11and it just buggers everything up.
07:13Even tougher, Rod is without mining partner Les.
07:17What's up?
07:18Les is away getting us a bogger.
07:20Now, a bogger's like a little front-end loader
07:22that we use underground to move dirt.
07:25A mate of ours has got one for sale.
07:27It needs a little bit of work,
07:29so he'll do that down there if he decides to buy it.
07:34How are you?
07:35Hey, doll. How was your trip?
07:36Good.
07:37Yeah?
07:38Yeah.
07:39So, yeah, I got the mail from the mines department.
07:43Dodges is up for renewal.
07:45Oh, yeah? How much is it?
07:47$350.
07:49With the claims, you've got to renew them every year,
07:52so every year they're going to cost you $350.
07:56I kept the claim because we got real good money out of there,
07:59we had a break from it,
08:01and then when we went to go back to it,
08:03that's when we discovered the radders,
08:05and when the radders went in there, they made it unsafe.
08:09Radders are opal thieves
08:11that illegally mine on claims they don't own.
08:14Where the radders got in's not safe.
08:16We can't work down there, but there's a bit of solid ground there
08:19we might be able to work into the solid ground,
08:21so I'll go and have a look and I'll see what's happening, all right?
08:25OK.
08:27You can't just keep paying renewal year after year after year.
08:31You know, so I've got to make up me mind,
08:33and if we're going to work it, then we'll go and work it,
08:35and if we're not going to go and work it, then I'll hand it in.
08:39Choosing which mine to keep is a gamble with serious consequences.
08:43Let the wrong one go,
08:45and Rod could be forfeiting a fortune in opal.
08:48Stay there, Nigel.
08:51Oh, hello.
08:54This is not us.
08:57We didn't do this. This is radders.
09:00This is all radders here.
09:02Jesus, they're unbelievable.
09:04Look at that. Little pile of pots they've left there.
09:06They could have left me some bloody colour.
09:09If they've left their tools here,
09:11they're fairly certain that I'm not coming back here,
09:13and they are.
09:15So we might have to do something about that.
09:24We're just going to dig out in there.
09:27We've got opal in the floor.
09:29That's why we're taking the floor.
09:32In Lightning Ridge,
09:34Chris Cheal and 18-year-old son Oscar
09:37are also pushing hard
09:39before the mining season is shut down
09:41by unworkable 47-degree summer temperatures.
09:45Hoping that we can get a full load before it gets too hot.
09:49Hoping that we can get a full load before it gets too hot.
09:53We've moved into our last week here.
09:55I guess the main objective for this week
09:57is prove this claim is worthy of digging,
10:00and if it's still carrying a lot of opal,
10:02we're going to come in here and rip it all out.
10:07That's a bogger. It's a good bit of gear.
10:09You dig on the digger.
10:11Obviously, there's a lot of dirt lying around.
10:13So it comes in, scoops it all up,
10:15chucks it in here, and then you back her into the bucket,
10:18pull it off and she goes straight up into the tuck.
10:27We've just been loading the bucket up.
10:29It hadn't come back down. It looked up and it was stuck.
10:31So we don't know why.
10:33With a busted hoist,
10:35there's no way of getting opal-rich dirt out of the mine.
10:40HEAVY MACHINERY
10:44Chris has returned to opal mining at the end of the season
10:48after a crippling three-year drought
10:50destroyed his trucking business.
10:52I don't know.
10:54There's many other industries that you can go into
10:56and go to work one morning
10:59and come home that afternoon
11:01and be set up for the rest of your life.
11:04Leasing a claim and taking a 70% cut of any opal found,
11:08the Cheels made a dream start...
11:11Oh, that's beautiful. Oh, yes!
11:14..finding $20,000 worth of black opal.
11:19It's given me a little bit extra that I can put back into gear to,
11:22which is good.
11:24We've only got a week left here,
11:26so we just decided we'd set the bogger and the super hoist up
11:29and not mess around, just get into it.
11:31My kind of main priority next year
11:34is being able to put myself through uni and college.
11:37Hence why I'm out here, you know, opal mining.
11:40This definitely could be life-changing.
11:42One day you could have nothing, next day you could be a millionaire.
11:44Joining the team is long-time family friend,
11:4719-year-old Farron Lamb.
11:50Farron, I treat him like a son.
11:52He's been part of our family for a lot of years now.
11:55Years ago, he got suspended from school,
11:58so he just mined with me for the week
12:00and I actually was really impressed with the way he worked,
12:03so it'll be good to have him here for the week
12:05and, you know, take the pressure off Oscar and myself a bit.
12:10My mum lives in Gaduga, like 70km away from here.
12:13There's not much work out there for me,
12:15so Chris Farron helped me a bit through work.
12:18He's like another brother, a friend, pretty much a dad.
12:21If we were to hit a really good poppet
12:23or a really good run of opal this week
12:25with the boys working with me,
12:28it would take the pressure off us, you know, that bit more,
12:31and that'd be a dream come true.
12:34But with struggling equipment exposed to the scorching sun...
12:38Bucket's stuck. He's up there checking it out now,
12:40so hopefully he can work it out and we can keep digging.
12:42..their season could be over.
12:44That's the hydraulic reservoir.
12:46Because it's so hot, the oil's heating up.
12:49It's not got the pulling power to get it over the top once it heats up.
12:53If the pump gives out, it's game over.
12:57WHIRRING
13:02I've got the map Cole put on me iPad
13:04and we can see where the coordinates are to go to.
13:09Yeah, there is hard ground here, but I think we'll handle it.
13:12We'll be able to rip that hard stuff off the machines.
13:15We've just got to dig in the right place.
13:17Greg's excavator has crawled 3km in two hours
13:21to the site identified by mining partners Stoney and Cole.
13:26This is really interesting-looking ground.
13:28You can see the different layers.
13:30This sort of stuff here on the top, it's fairly hard,
13:33and suddenly there's a bit of a level there of clay
13:37and there's some rocks, and those rocks had a bit of opal in them.
13:40Clock's ticking.
13:42If it's a good place, we'd put a lease on it.
13:44That's what we want.
13:46The team have less than a week to secure a claim on the permit
13:50before they lose access to the land.
13:53But it's only worth it if they can find a rich pocket of opal.
13:57All the signs are there. You'd be mad not to have a go here.
14:00Greg's excavator is able to move one tonne of dirt in a single bucket,
14:05vital in the search for the ironstone rocks that hold the opal.
14:09Oh, you've got a good chunk of that level.
14:12We'll just see if there's any rocks.
14:14This is what we're looking for, our opal trace.
14:17Basically, these rocks are hidden in that level,
14:20so we've got to be real careful and check it really well.
14:34I'm going to have to check the oil, I think.
14:36I'm down on oil pressure and the temperature's up, Stoney.
14:38Oh, great.
14:40In the 40-plus degree heat,
14:42Greg's 40-year-old excavator is beginning to feel the strain.
14:47It looks like she's running a bit hot.
14:49I think I'd better turn her off.
14:53Hey!
14:54Might not be a real good thing at all.
14:56Bloody hell. I can't see any oil dripping.
14:59Hey, she's got nothing on the stick, eh?
15:02Oh.
15:03Maybe the motor's getting sick, I don't know.
15:05Got any oil?
15:07I don't think I've got any at the camp.
15:10Oh. I'll go and see what I can find, boys.
15:14Well, we've bloody hit a bit of drama here.
15:17We're out of oil.
15:19We are here in the bloody middle of nowhere.
15:21The nearest town's, like, 130km away.
15:24It's a two-and-a-half, three-hour trip at least
15:26to go to town and get some oil.
15:28So I'll just jump in the two-way
15:30and give a couple of the local farmers a call.
15:36A veteran of 20 years mustering cattle,
15:39Stoney has worked many of the farms in the region.
15:43We've only got a few days to dig.
15:45Hopefully somebody's got spare 20 litres of oil
15:47sitting around that we can borrow.
15:49Get us out of the shit and get us back into the work.
16:01We've invested thousands of dollars
16:04and a lot of blood, sweat and tears into a hole
16:07and them bastards come down and in one night
16:10take what you've been working for months for.
16:13Battling ratter thieves
16:15and without partner Les to watch his back,
16:18Rod Manning's deciding whether to renew
16:21his dangerous dodgies claim.
16:26Dodgies was a good mine.
16:28There was a lot of money come out of there.
16:30There's still money in there,
16:32but where potentially there's good money I can't get into.
16:36The ratters have taken too much column out
16:38and I've got too wide a space.
16:40Even if I tried to work here I'd have to put
16:4220 or 30 bloody props in the hole
16:44and strong possibility of collapse.
16:46So I think I might get the bloody hell out of here
16:49and go up where they were scratching around up there
16:52in the safer stuff because this is way unsafe.
16:55I do not like even being down here.
17:00This is where the ratters have been scratching around.
17:02They've been scratching around here
17:04so I guess I'll have a little bit of a look here
17:07and just see potch absolute everywhere.
17:11This here, that's all opal.
17:15Not coloured of course.
17:18If this is all full of colour,
17:20every stone that falls down there
17:22is probably worth between $3,000 and $20,000.
17:27So, you know, in 30 seconds I can have
17:31a couple of hundred thousand dollars in me hand.
17:38Good potch.
17:40Where's the colour?
17:42You're not going to have ratters unless you've got colour.
17:45So I think what I'll do is I'll come back down with a jackhammer
17:48and I'll have a bit of a dig in here
17:50and just see what it looks like.
17:52They've sort of showed me the way there, haven't they?
18:02I think it might be the oil.
18:05It's definitely oil wasn't letting it come up in the first place.
18:0845-degree heat has caused the Cheels bucket hoist to fail,
18:13the only way of getting opal dirt out of their 13-metre deep mine.
18:18The oil's too hot. We started too late in the day.
18:21We've got to be starting earlier, getting out here earlier,
18:24getting the load over and done with, no messing around.
18:27So I'm just going to try and cool it down and up
18:29and we might be able to get the last two buckets on.
18:32The heat has thinned the hydraulic oil,
18:34reducing pressure in the hoist's pump.
18:37A quick fix is ice-cold water on a rag
18:40to cool the oil and increase its thickness.
18:44I'm going to start this hoist up again
18:46and I want you to hit the up button and see if she'll get over.
18:50Righto. Righto, give it a go.
19:03While it's back in action, the hoist could fail at any moment,
19:08leaving Chris with no way to find opal to pay off business debts.
19:13I am concerned about the pump back there
19:15and I really want to just finish off and get going,
19:18but the heat's just breaking us a bit.
19:21We've been getting our opal down deep,
19:23so, yeah, we'll take a bit more floor out and have a look.
19:33Not real happy with the amount of dust coming out of the face.
19:36It's just bad for your lungs.
19:39The dirt's real hard in the corner here and it's too dusty.
19:42I can't extract the dust out
19:44because I haven't had a chance to put a ventilation shaft down.
19:47So if I keep digging here, it's going to fill my lungs with dust
19:51and that's no good because you end up with silicosis.
19:54Silicosis is chronic lung disease
19:57caused by inhaling silica particles,
20:00a primary mineral in opal creation.
20:04I'm just going to pull up on this and we're going to go straight in there
20:07where it's softer and it's not as dusty.
20:09When we got that really good find,
20:11we were just two or three foot from this wall.
20:13We were seeing gems everywhere,
20:15so decided to head this way, see if it's carrying on that level.
20:19We put props up to reinforce the roof,
20:21so make sure it doesn't fall down.
20:23So if you go straight in there and start digging it out,
20:25eventually it'll fall down.
20:27So you put them up to avoid cave-ins
20:29and big bits of rocks falling down and hitting you
20:31because it's too dangerous.
20:33Chainsaw?
20:35Yeah, bro.
20:36And lead. 240-volt lead, please.
20:39Where's the lead?
20:40Come on, boys, you've got to get with it.
20:52We'll need that one out of the way.
20:55Can you put that cap in?
20:57All right, just grab that little hammer.
20:59Behind this chair, Oscar.
21:07Doesn't take long to put a couple of props in and make it safe, you know?
21:10You've got to support the roof because
21:12as she comes in, you're not getting out.
21:17We should be able to load this truck pretty quick.
21:19If the hoist stops, then that's the end of our digging,
21:21so we just want to concentrate on getting this load out
21:24before it gets to the rock.
21:29In this really tight space, I've got to be careful of the wires.
21:32Last thing we want, you know, being so cramped for room,
21:35last thing we want is it being reversed over the wires
21:37and ripping it all up.
21:38Yeah, that'll put us back for days.
21:41Hopefully there's a few gems in there and, you know,
21:45hopefully it covers costs, but then obviously, you know,
21:49you want some good pocket money after that,
21:53but we'll just see.
21:55I think there'll be money there.
21:57I just don't know how much.
22:00Bucket's starting to play up again,
22:02and I think now it's starting to heat up.
22:04It's going all the way to the bottom.
22:06Bucket's starting to play up again,
22:08and I think now it's starting to heat up.
22:10It's going all the way to the bottom.
22:11Midday, and the mercury's hitting 47 degrees.
22:15Too hot to mine.
22:17A couple of beers and we'll tail out
22:19and see what we've got at the end of the day.
22:22They still need to transport the mined dirt
22:2540 kilometres to their agitator
22:27to be washed and examined for opal.
22:31Pull up, boys. I think we've found a tyre.
22:44So we dropped a tyre right end
22:46on our beautiful roads that we've got here at the moment.
22:50We just didn't need this today, you know.
22:53We've decreased our chances of actually finding opal
22:56by the end of the week.
22:58I'm frustrated, pissed off.
23:16Travelling at 180 kilometres per hour,
23:19Stoney's desperately hunting for engine oil
23:22on Weona cattle station.
23:25It is a bit of a worry.
23:27The machine did get a bit hot and oil pressure was dropping.
23:30This machine does use oil.
23:32It's not a new machine.
23:34The team urgently need oil for their excavator
23:37to continue digging for signs of opal
23:39on land they will lose access to in a week's time.
23:42We've got the clock ticking.
23:44We've only got so long and then it's someone else's go.
23:47Nothing worse than dripping oil.
23:49Just blow a hose or get a pinhole in it.
23:52You always put an oil in it.
23:54It all costs money.
24:23Bloody bit of local knowledge.
24:25Luckily, bloody Frank and Paula at Weona there helped us out.
24:29I do a bit of work for them.
24:31Thought he might have a bit of oil sitting around there, so it's good.
24:34The 20 litres of oil will give the team another day of digging,
24:38but soon extreme summer temperatures will shut down all work.
24:44Sounds like he's coming, Cole.
24:46Bit of luck he's got the oil, hey?
24:48Yeah.
24:52Don't worry.
24:54No worries, mate.
24:56OK.
25:01She's right, Colin, we can make a start.
25:05Cool.
25:09They're searching for good opal colour,
25:11from blues and greens to the rarest and most valuable, red.
25:17We're bloody just running into a little family here at Waxman.
25:20This one here come off the end of this one here.
25:22Have a look at this.
25:26You're just going to see a big sneaker too fitting behind here
25:29and pop that whole chunk out, mate.
25:31Hopefully it'll come out and they'll all be sitting up on top of it.
25:37There we go.
25:39Beautiful.
25:41This is sandstone and this is clay,
25:43and the rocks are stuck up against the sandstone,
25:46so we've got to try and separate them without hurting them.
26:03It's gone a bit bloody boring here, mate.
26:06We haven't seen any colour for a bit.
26:08And it's getting a bit hot.
26:10Hammer's getting heavy.
26:17There's some colour.
26:19Look at that one. That's nice and bright.
26:22Bloody hell.
26:24Yeah, nice bit of blue-green, nice and thick too.
26:27So maybe there'll be more stuff as we go in, I reckon.
26:30Off we go.
26:32They're all there, look at that.
26:34It's a big nest, hey?
26:36Yeah, yeah.
26:38Ooh, here we go.
26:41I'm getting excited.
26:46Wow.
26:48Check that out, boys.
26:50Woo-hoo.
26:52We're getting some nice colour.
26:54There's some little stones there.
26:57Oi, look at this, fellas.
26:59Oh, bloody hell.
27:01Oh, it's red.
27:03Red!
27:05Red, mate, look at that.
27:07There you go, that's what happens.
27:09Oh, it flashes to green one way.
27:11Yeah, one way's green, one way's red.
27:13That's unreal.
27:15Jam.
27:19Oh, box birdie.
27:21It is red.
27:23This'll be good, this'll keep me out of the paddock
27:25with a bucket full of this, I'll be happy.
27:27That is very good colour.
27:29That is beautiful.
27:31That shows what this place is capable of.
27:40Yesterday I found a few little bits of trace.
27:43I'm just going to drop some cables down here now
27:46and get a jackhammer and some lights down there
27:48and have a bit of a dig and just see what it looks like.
27:52At Dodgy's, Rod faces a $350 lease renewal fee.
27:57Still short of his season target,
27:59he needs to prove it's worth keeping.
28:01Hey, you stay. Stay.
28:04When you're doing it tough, that's hard money to come up with.
28:08I've got to sort of figure out if it's worth hanging on to.
28:13Complicating matters.
28:15Ratters have been stealing opal from the mine.
28:18This is where they left that little bit of hotch for me,
28:21so hook in, I guess.
28:34Where's the colour?
28:37Some bloody ice-chunky rat and bastard's got it, I guess.
28:43Yeah, look at that. They missed a bit.
28:45That's nice colour.
28:47And that's obviously why they've been digging here.
28:50That's enough to get the old heart beating a bit quicker, I reckon.
28:53It's nice colour.
28:55I think we're going to keep it.
28:58That's enough to get me excited.
29:00I think we'll keep it like we renew the lease.
29:03You can always guarantee if you've got ratters in a mine,
29:06you've got colour in a mine.
29:14Well, these weren't here yesterday.
29:18These definitely weren't here yesterday and neither was this.
29:24See, that's fresh.
29:28Someone's been down here last night, cos that wasn't there yesterday.
29:31Cos we were in here, I would have saw it.
29:33Last night they were here.
29:35The only way to stop them is to be here when they're here.
29:37So I'm coming back tonight to stuff them.
29:43Well, the ratters are active. They're about.
29:46All I can do is go out to the claim
29:48and find yourself a box tree to sit underneath and wait
29:51and see if they turn up or not.
29:56Let's do this.
30:02The way I've got to do it is get out there,
30:05hide this away in the scrub a little bit,
30:07just find a tree and sit underneath the tree and wait.
30:11Can't have any lights or anything on.
30:13I've got to be a bit smart, a bit careful.
30:16A pick handle ain't much good against a shotgun.
30:21They won't see us from here, I don't think.
30:29You don't know whether they're going to turn up.
30:31You don't know whether it's one bloke,
30:33you don't know whether it's four blokes,
30:35you don't know whether they've got guns.
30:37You just have to wait and see what happens.
30:41I'd sooner cop a flogging than let someone steal off me.
30:46You know, I've copped floggings before.
30:49You heel, you'll get over them.
30:51But you don't heel or get over being a dog
30:54and laying down and letting people walk all over you.
31:07Hello, here we go.
31:10Yeah, there, look.
31:15Nah, I think that's just one of the boys going home from the pub.
31:19I think we might put that one down to a false alarm.
31:31Ooh, that sounds like a car.
31:37Yeah, this is it, righto.
31:39This is it, fellas, this is it.
31:50Hey, you thieving bastard, yeah, run!
31:54You, mate, I heard you, squinter!
31:57I saw you!
32:01Don't rush, cos I know who you are!
32:04He's just a little friggin' grub.
32:08I can pay him a visit.
32:10That's the end of our ratter problem.
32:18To secure Dodgie's claim,
32:20Rod needs to sell the opal he found
32:23to help pay for the $350 renewal fee.
32:26Whenever I get some reasonable stones
32:29that are only little and don't cost much money,
32:32I run them down to Sandra.
32:34She's very easy to deal with.
32:36You home, Sandra?
32:38Come on in.
32:39I've got something for you.
32:40Oh, beauty, I've been waiting.
32:42I need a little bit of extra.
32:44They're not spectacular,
32:45but I think you might be able to do something with them.
32:48Yep.
32:49There's a couple of them there,
32:50there's a couple of these little ones
32:52that you'll be able to do something with.
32:53Yeah, that one I can, definitely.
32:55You'll get a couple of rings out of them,
32:56I reckon, and maybe a pendant.
32:58That's a nice one.
33:00That should come up actually quite nice.
33:02Yeah.
33:03What are you looking at for the whole lot?
33:05Oh, I don't know, Sandra.
33:06I reckon to you $300.
33:08Well, a bit of work in that one.
33:11Mmm, $300.
33:14What do you want to give me?
33:16I reckon about $250.
33:18$250?
33:19Well, I see it's fair, $250.
33:22Well, that'll do me.
33:23I'm happy with that.
33:24$250's done.
33:25Good on you, Sandra.
33:26Thank you very much.
33:27Yeah.
33:28I'll even chuck a 10 in.
33:29LAUGHTER
33:32With $250 from the sale,
33:35Rod has enough money to renew the lease on the mine.
33:39I'm pretty happy, to tell you the truth.
33:41Old Les is away,
33:43so he's missed out on a bit of bloody excitement
33:46and a bit of fun,
33:47but with us renewing the lease
33:49and going back there to work,
33:50to get that little bit of colour,
33:52I didn't do very much digging at all,
33:54so another good sign.
33:56Hold on.
33:58Where are we going?
33:59LAUGHTER
34:02How flash is that, eh?
34:04Wow.
34:05I know where to trade it, girl.
34:07This looks good.
34:08That's beautiful.
34:10Love you.
34:12Love you, too.
34:13Best wife I've ever had.
34:14LAUGHTER
34:25Our steering itself smashed.
34:28Oh, I'll have to try them later.
34:30Um, very frustrating.
34:33On the penultimate day of their mining season,
34:36the Cheels truck,
34:37full of potentially opal-bearing dirt,
34:40is busted.
34:41Tyrod end.
34:43It keeps your wheels in line and parallel.
34:45She snapped off.
34:48The nearest town for a new Tyrod end
34:51is Walgett, 80km away,
34:53but first, Chris has to get the broken one off.
34:59It's not coming out like that.
35:01It's not going to hurry.
35:03So me brother's trying to track one down in Walgett.
35:06He said he'll come up, give us a hand to get it out,
35:09and this is what he does, you know.
35:12He fixes trucks and tractors and whatever else.
35:15He's a pretty handy mechanic.
35:17How you going, brother?
35:18Good, mate. What's up?
35:19Good. Thanks for coming up.
35:20Uncle Geoffo just arrived.
35:22He's got the new tyre bar, crowbar, everything.
35:24So we're going to try and get the old one off.
35:26We were having a bit of trouble earlier, but he's the expert,
35:28so hopefully he can sort something out
35:30and then we'll get the new one on and hopefully get going.
35:37There goes the other one.
35:39It's off now.
35:41We dropped this one out and we snapped the other one,
35:43getting this out here.
35:45So we'll take this back to the workshop
35:47and undo them down there, fix it all up.
35:50Frustrating, but we'll just try and get back tonight
35:53and get it finished off.
35:56Right.
36:02The chills return from Walcott
36:04with the parts they need to fix the truck.
36:07I need one of yous on one side to hold it up,
36:10keep it out of the dirt.
36:12We'll start the truck.
36:14I'll get someone in on the steering wheel.
36:20Just go right hand down, just slow.
36:22Turn.
36:24Turn.
36:27Woo! Woo!
36:31Good days.
36:33We got it on. Only took a few minutes.
36:35Still a lot.
36:39Right-o. Pack that up.
36:41Yeah, I am happy.
36:43Let's just hope we have a good, smooth day tomorrow, you know.
36:46Yeah.
36:51With the truck fixed,
36:53the chills can finally deliver the 15 tonnes of dirt
36:56and with it, the hope of Chris being able to pay off crippling debt.
37:01We're here just about to start our last hail out of the season,
37:04so, you know, we had that breakdown yesterday,
37:07which, you know, wrecked the whole day for us.
37:09We're all very disappointed,
37:11so, I don't know, hopefully we can finish the season on a high.
37:13The agitator, a giant water-filled rotating drum,
37:17strips dirt from the sandstone, revealing any opal.
37:21If I was free to find some opal together, it'd be pretty special,
37:24so hopefully that's the case.
37:32Jeez, look at that colour.
37:34Right-o.
37:36I got him. That is bright.
37:39Whoa!
37:41Oi, look at the colour in that.
37:43That's a nice colour.
37:45Yeah, it just started and picking up.
37:47Really, really nice colour, so...
37:49Um, yeah, super good. It's a good start.
37:52Blue-purple stone.
37:54Check that one out.
37:56Oh, nice colour on black, too.
37:58Oh, that's a nice colour.
38:00Oh!
38:02Look at that.
38:04Bloody ace, hey? See that one?
38:06Got one. Look at that one.
38:08Yeah, that's bright.
38:10Could cut a decent stone out of that. It's flashy as.
38:12Yeah.
38:14Think we've got another little payday there.
38:16How you doing, big fella?
38:18Buzz?
38:20Come on, man.
38:22The Cheels have found black opal,
38:25predominantly blue-green with flashes of red and yellow.
38:29It's in the rough, and there's an estimated 200 grams.
38:34Fair bit of material.
38:36Yeah, what do you reckon? How much?
38:38There's definitely five grand in the rough there,
38:41and, you know, if a few of these rub up,
38:44we'll get 10 grand. We'll get 10 grand for it.
38:46Yeah, I reckon.
38:48After a basic polish,
38:50the Cheels have an estimated $10,000 worth of opal.
38:54Their 70% share brings their season total to $29,400.
39:00The prospects are a lot better going into next year
39:03than what they were at the start of the year for me, that's for sure.
39:06When we got that bit of opal,
39:08I felt like the weight of the world lifting off me, you know,
39:10because I knew it allowed me to just breathe a bit easier,
39:13you know, like I had costs going out.
39:15Pressure came off me right in that instant, really.
39:18I feel proud. Dad never really asked for help,
39:21and he asked me to come up here and give him a hand,
39:24and got it done. Happy as I can be now.
39:28Finding over 20 grand, it definitely helps me next year.
39:32So there's a lot of expenses with uni and college
39:34and just living in Sydney and stuff next year.
39:36In all the breaks we get, I'll be out here giving him a hand,
39:39because I love it, he loves it, and it's good to do it together.
39:43I'm really happy. It was a good end of the season,
39:45and knowing that I've got country that's worthwhile digging in front of me,
39:49we'll be back next year.
39:59If I can't see any colour, I'll throw it there.
40:01If I see some colour, I'll throw it here.
40:04Cole, Greg and Stoney are about to lose access to land
40:08on their exploration permit.
40:10They want to be convinced the site has potential
40:13for high-end boulder opal.
40:16Ah, yeah, this is a six-inch trim saw.
40:18Very thin blade there, very good for cutting, I reckon.
40:21What do you reckon? I'll try this one, eh?
40:23Yeah, get into them, mate, I reckon, eh?
40:25OK.
40:26What they find in these ironstone rocks
40:28will decide if they stake a claim
40:30and start a bigger operation next season,
40:33or abandon it, wasting four days' mining and thousands of dollars.
40:38Let the saw answer your questions, and some do and some don't.
40:42I'll do this one.
40:47Greg's had 40 years' cutting experience,
40:50but one slip of the saw could destroy the opal.
40:55Whoa!
40:57There we go.
40:59That's amazing.
41:01That's what we're looking for, boys.
41:03Look at that.
41:04Wow, big chunks.
41:05That's colour.
41:06That is nice.
41:07Good stuff.
41:11So, yeah, this one looks under.
41:13Yeah.
41:14This one's Kingstone, it's the best quality opal.
41:17Hopefully it runs in here and it'll be good.
41:20I hope we pick it up.
41:22It'll be good.
41:23I hope we pick it up on the first cut.
41:26The Kingstone shows rare red opal on the face.
41:30If it continues inside, it could be worth tens of thousands of dollars.
41:37Let's see if there's something there.
41:40No, it didn't run to there.
41:43When I sawed it, it was the first saw cut,
41:45didn't show any more opal.
41:48Greg tries a second cut straight through the middle of the stone.
41:53OK, we're getting close.
41:56Won't be long.
41:59Here we go.
42:00Here we go.
42:02Oh.
42:04That's running.
42:05Running!
42:07Running!
42:08Goes from side to side.
42:10Beautiful colour either side.
42:12I can see it now, yeah.
42:14That's definitely one chunky stone.
42:16Yeah.
42:18That's what it's all about, eh?
42:20Yeah.
42:21Meant to be, Stoney.
42:22Yeah, she's worth a few bucks.
42:23Don't worry about that.
42:24Definitely.
42:25Oh, yeah.
42:26That gives hope.
42:27We must keep digging.
42:29They have high-quality boulder opal,
42:32ranging from prized red through to mid-value blues and greens.
42:36It's been sawn, and there's five kilograms.
42:40Potentially, between those two bits,
42:42that could be, like, ten grand, you know?
42:44Yeah, and then the other stuff that's with it,
42:46I'm thinking around $15,000-plus.
42:48We definitely didn't dig a dud.
42:49Nah.
42:50And that's more to dig.
42:51With an estimated value of over $15,000,
42:55this opal find is the proof the team need to stake a claim
42:59and together set up a mine.
43:02It's great to know that that area's producing that material.
43:05Good commercial stuff as well.
43:07A lot more gem, I think, to come yet.
43:09Good on you, great meeting you, mate.
43:10It was a pleasure, mate.
43:11I enjoyed it.
43:12Cheers, mate.
43:13Me too.
43:14Off to a good start.
43:16Yeah, no, it looks good, eh?
43:18You can't not be happy with that, that grounds.
43:21It's doing all the things that it should do to produce opal.
43:25It's been great working with the team.
43:27I've just got a good feeling about this one.
43:29Things are coming together for a reason,
43:31and that's so we can, you know, find some opal and be successful.
43:35It's already paid off.
43:37I think in time we'll find a lot more of that type of material.
43:41We are off to a very good start.
43:43Opal will fly.
44:13.