Crawney Station is a large high rainfall basalt grazing property that will appeal to the cattleman looking for value, reliability and productivity. Strong country suited to breeding or fattening.
Location: Situated in undulating foothills and upper land areas of the Liverpool Ranges in the Timor/Crawey area of the Upper Hunter Valley. Approximately 70 km from Scone and 90 km from Tamworth.
Rainfall: One of the highest rainfall areas of the district with approximately 37 inches or 925 mm per annum.
Pastures and country: Comprising a balance of native and introduced species. Currently carrying a good body of feed with pastures in good order. Soils are predominantly chocolate basalt, and the topography rises from valley floor to elevated shelves and steep range country.
Water: A significant upgrade to the stock watering system has recently been undertaken. Two reliable bores and a mono pump supply reticulated water to a series of new troughs and header tanks. The property is also watered by 42 dams and frontage to the Isis River.
Housing: Set overlooking the river and towards the range is a 4-bedroom weatherboard home in good order. Featuring high ceilings, 2 bathrooms, air conditioning, office eat in kitchen and established gardens. Additional housing via a 2-bedroom cottage and 1-bedroom cottage.
Infrastructure: New 400 + head capacity steel cattleyards, renovated timber cattleyards, 20 x 20 metre steel framed shed with chemical lockup, 8 x 12 metre steel framed machinery shed with workshop and concrete floor, 3 stand woolshed, 5 stables. Subdivided into 30 paddocks with the large majority of fencing in good stock proof condition.