Walgett Website and Business Directory

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Welcome to Walgett

Walgett is a town in northern NSW, Australia, it is the junction of the Barwon and Namoi Rivers and the Kamilaroi and Castlereagh Highways. It was inhabited by the Gamilaroi (also spelt Kamilaroi) Nation of Indigenous peoples before white settlement.

Walgett website and business directory, Walgett is a town in northern NSW, Australia, it is the junction of the Barwon and Namoi Rivers and the Kamilaroi and Castlereagh Highways. It was inhabited by the Gamilaroi (also spelt Kamilaroi) Nation of Indigenous peoples before white settlement. It was gazetted in 1851 and town sites were surveyed in 1859.

Tourism

Walgett is a major highway junction for touring routes to the north Lightning Ridge, to the East Burren Junction and Wee Waa to the South Coonamble to the west Brewarrina.

Agriculture

The Walgett District is a producer of a variety of agricultural commodities including cotton, wheat, beef cattle and sheep and pulse crops.

History

Walgett is rich in history it was gazetted in 1859 and the courthouse built in 1865 it was a port for paddle steamers in 1861 to 1870.  It was proclaimed 20 March 1885 and surveyed.

Directory

A business directory of the town and is included in the Namoi Business Directory, if you own a business the cost to have a landing page and or a listing is minimal.

Rural News

Another large piece of NSW's biggest sheep station about to be sold

Another large piece of NSW's biggest sheep station about to be sold

Peppora Station to be listed for sale: A giant of the Darling.
Monday, April 20, 2026/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (1309)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: 4.0
Categories: Rural News
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Multi-title Maranoa property with lifestyle potential heads to auction

Multi-title Maranoa property with lifestyle potential heads to auction

A Maranoa lifestyle property is headed to auction.
Sunday, April 19, 2026/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (1505)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
Categories: Rural News
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Goatmeat's path forward relies on US demand plus a broader market mix

Goatmeat's path forward relies on US demand plus a broader market mix

The US market remains the cornerstone for Australian producers.
Sunday, April 19, 2026/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (1613)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
Categories: Rural News
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From rise to reality: is One Nation's recent support surge slipping away?

From rise to reality: is One Nation's recent support surge slipping away?

One Nation's support dips as policy details and competition emerge.
Sunday, April 19, 2026/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (1499)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
Categories: Rural News
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Premier Macedon Ranges sheep property returns to market near Kyneton

Premier Macedon Ranges sheep property returns to market near Kyneton

Macedon Ranges fine wool gem Avington back for sale.
Sunday, April 19, 2026/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (1490)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
Categories: Rural News
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Fuel Chaos Grips the Nation

Published on Friday, March 13, 2026

Fuel Chaos Grips the Nation

12 March 2026 - Author Stephen Gardiner

A wave of mild hysteria swept across the region this week as towns up and down the highway reported dwindling fuel supplies. Drivers were spotted forming queues longer than a Centrelink phone wait, clutching jerry cans like they were rare artefacts from a bygone civilisation. Rumours spread faster than a harvest fire: “No fuel by lunchtime!”, “Servo’s dry!”, “Someone filled a Hilux AND a boat—selfish bugger!”

Local councils issued calm, measured statements encouraging residents to “avoid panic buying,” which of course triggered even more panic buying. One town reportedly saw a man attempt to siphon petrol from his own lawnmower “just in case.”

But in the midst of the chaos, one community remained perfectly, serenely unfazed.

Burren Junction.

While the rest of the region scrambled, Burren locals simply shrugged, sipped their coffees, and carried on with their day. When asked how they were staying so calm during the crisis, one resident replied:

“Mate… Burren Junction ran out of petrol 15 years ago.”

 

Author - Stephen Gardiner

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