20+ Photos: The Fraser Coast Ag Show 2021 photo gallery
All the action from the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021.
Stuart Fast
less than 2 min read
May 21, 2021 - 6:55PM
Fraser Coast Chronicle
1/28An aerial view of the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021 at the Maryborough Show Grounds. Photo: Stuart Fast
2/28Jim McPhee and Kim Rhodes from Maryborough enjoy a dagwood dog at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
3/28Raymond Cross from Freedom Rise Galloway Stud farm with award winning Scottish belted Galloway cow Picasso. Photo: Stuart Fast
4/28Emma, Ty and Mason White show of their show bag haul from the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
5/28Fraser Coast Ag Show Patrons ride the bumper cars, one of the most popular rides at the show. Photo: Stuart Fast
6/28(L) Wood chop competitors Craig Wagner, Phil Campbell and Tom Wilkinson compete at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
7/28(L) Lillian Facuri Gois and Oscar Gardner Sesar enjoy the teacup ride at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
8/28Stuart Westblade from Dundowran Beach prepares to have a go on the High Striker game at the Fraser Coast. Photo: Stuart Fast
9/28Isobel Slavin and son William Anderson from Hervey Bay tuck in to fairy floss at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
10/28Tracy and Amber Glock from Howard enjoy a potato swirl at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
11/28Paul Graham from Maryborough checks out the cake decorating displays at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
12/28Emily Perina and her horse Ginger in the show jumping ring at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
13/28Fraser Coast Ag Show patrons fly through the air on rides. Photo: Stuart Fast
14/28Cassie and Summer Richards from Hervey Bay show off the show bags they got from the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
15/28Visitors to the Fraser Coast Ag Show walk through the side show full of games to play. Photo: Stuart Fast
16/28(L) Courtney Marshall and Jack Morris from K'Gari Kelpie Stud with their K'Gari Kelpie jumping dogs Annie, Coupah and Roy who performed at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
17/28Tony Arrowsmith from Blackbutt competes in the wood chop competition at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
18/28Thrill seekers at the Fraser Coast Ag Show fly through the air on the Power Surge ride. Photo: Stuart Fast
19/28(L) Kim Crillesen and Samantha Brodie from Gladstone enjoy a day out at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
20/28Brian Carter from Tiaro runs Kelbriton Lane Dexter Stud and is a stud cattle steward at the 2021 Fraser Coast Ag Show. He is pictured with his small breed dexter bull Wally. Photo: Stuart Fast
21/28Queensland Show Next Gen Ambassador Matilda Sly at the Fraser Coast Ag Show promoting regional Ag Shows across Queensland. She is also the Warwick 2021 Showgirl. Photo: Stuart Fast
22/28(L) Tayissa Richters and Rosie White fly through the air on the Cliff Hanger ride at the Fraser Coast Ag Show.
23/28(L) Travis Wason and Jesse Barnell point to the Extreme ride they went on at the Fraser Coast Ag Show.
24/28Cake judging steward Bev Hibberd displays decorated cakes at the Fraser Coast Ag Show.
25/28(L) Finn Ammenhauser and Veronica van der Merwe take aim at the air rifle range at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021. Photo: Stuart Fast
26/28Margaret and Paul Stanton from Canberra enjoy a fresh dagwood dog at the Fraser Coast Ag Show for 2021.
27/28Year 10 Riverside Christian College Student Charlotte Ravenscroft with a black Limousin cow at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
28/28The Ferris Wheel looms over the crowds at the Fraser Coast Ag Show. Photo: Stuart Fast
Many Queenslanders have resoundingly rejected Premier Steven Miles’ no frills option for an Olympic Games stadium, instead backing the more ambitious proposals which could also lure major artists like Taylor Swift to Queensland. SPECIAL REPORT
While Labor is spruiking free bolognese pasta, burgers and chow mein for our schoolchildren, people are dying on roads built more than 30 years ago which are painfully inadequate to deal with the traffic volumes of 2024, writes Mark Furler