cape york 1972, leyland brothers world, condensed story
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- Опубліковано 28 вер 2024
- Mostly land rover action, but also includes winching, fixing tyres, other story details. I cut most of the scenic filming from this one.
See the full episode here: • cape york 1972, leylan...
Well these guys inspired a mate and I to give it a go in August 72. We travelled in an 1100 Moke and got to the Jardine. In 74 we took a 1275 Californian Moke across the Jardine on a 44 gallon drum and two airbeds and took it to the top. Our record was being bogged 47 times in one day. We pulled ourselves out with a manual boat winch.
bloody hell that was a good effort in a moke with that ground clearance and 2wd, i did it on a motorbike 15years ago.awesome
I worked in Bamaga 76-77 and had heard abt the '74 trip in the moke but the story by then was it was made by two female Bamaga primary school teachers.
The only outside contact them there days was radio Australia and BPA dc3
once a week into Jacky Jacky airstrip. Little traffic up there then as noted in the vid as each community had only one truck, some teachers their bikes. The DAIA had the work machinery. Permission early in the piece was needed from the Manager to go camping outside of town but was more of a safety issue than anything else.
Steve Mckeough, Dave Brennan and myself made a bike trip in Aug '77 down to Cairns from Bamaga which lasted 4 days, the first 30 miles south of the Jardine took 10 hours. The two Kens had dropped Jerry cans off weeks before at what was then known as Cox's camp at 50mile south of the Jardine before Heathlands stn and passed another onto Moreton stn. so we could refuel. We reached Coen on the saturday of the Coen races to hear Elvis Presley had just died.
The two Ken's are there in the vid and would go through a ctn of hot stubbies / day when working the line and as they would say would sweat it all out.
Kenny Savo of Cody between Red Island point and New Mapoon lost his life to a croc at that PMG crossing showing the two kens in the vid in the early '80's swimming the same PMG dinghy we had used to get the bikes across, back to the other side. The croc was lying there on the bottom of the deepest fastest water on the southern bank of the Jardine. His body after a wide week long search was found by Kenny Cox near to the crossing. They were the best of mates and it broke him. Kenny Savo had a laugh so infectious. It is said that later on when Kenny Cox retired to Smithfield in Cairns with his family, he went to the local one night shouted a round for the whole bar and went home and died in his sleep the same night. They're all gone now and sadly missed.
@@iandaniel2153 well one of our party was a teacher. She flew out of Bamaga as she had to get back to work. The other was a nurse.
@@tigeryoung8611 ... ok thanks that straightens it out. The nurses up there were a great crew and far enough removed from matron on TI.
Hi Tiger ! Mate, I really have VERY high admiration for your 72 and 74 trip. I too am a 'Moker' have been since about 1980 and still am today. I've been up the Cape in my Moke with 2 other Mokin' mates in 2012, a 'breeze' compared to your trips !!!!
Our Moke Club went up in 82 and it was the trip from hell for them, they made it through somehow but everything that could go wrong, did !
Any photos from your trips ?
Videos from that era where straight to the point and without all that "Macho" bullshit you see these days. No more than commercials disguised as 4x4 trips. Thanks for the upload.
Cough... Gall Boys..cough!!
That exactly why I can't watch ultimate adventure anymore!
These guys could get a car through anything but they never carried on about it. Doesn’t get much better than that!
@@Mike_Costello knock it off fella,, go fly your little toys.
Isn't that the truth ! You want to see results not endless talk.
It was because of this film/expedition way back in 1972 that as a 10yo child I was so captivated by this trip that after I left the RAAF in 1987 I moved to Brisbane and bought my first 4x4. in 2001 a 1987 4.2ltr petrol LWB Nissan Patrol. And in 2004 I travailed up the cape with the Queensland Nissan Patrol club. I have lived the dream.
Thank you so much to the Leyland brothers for the inspiration you gave us up and coming explorers...
Back when 4x4's were just a tool, not the bloody luxury, leather bound, DVD installed, electrical nightmare, mortgage breaking vehicles we have today.
I disagree mate, i bought 2 fj cruisers 2012 and a 2017 both bog stock with atrs on it made it up there in comfort the whole way. No problems, still driven every single day. Since new. Neither of them have missed a beat.
Totally agree mate, the modern Land Rovers are so unreliable you wouldn’t dream of going off tarmac, it’s a real shame. Unfortunately it’s all about looks and that’s the target market “Chavs”..
Still miss my series 2A..😢
All true, but a diff lock would have been handy for them.
@@richardsmart120 2A's were the best!
Couldn't be said better mate
Loved the Leyland Bros when I was a kid. Living out the dream now. Cape York & Kimberleys is in the planning stages now for 2022.
Good luck!
Done this trip yet mate ?
I did to Bamaga in a panel van about 2005. 👍 The road is good all the way through now.
I grew up watching Mike and Mal and now am so grateful to be able to watch them with my own kids. We love to 4WD and camp and this was as expected - both compelling and a note to how soft we are these days! Cheers Andrew for putting this up - much appreciated mate! Dave and family in Sydney
I was thinking the same thing, everything is much easier and softer now with the options we have.
Watching this makes you realise how easy we have it
What a journey, what an adventure, and what great viewing, need to watch more, brilliant and well done
Old school
Pioneers. Inspired my dad to take our family up to the Cape in 1978. Drove across the Jardine River. Camped near the Tip probably where the carpark is now. No sign marking the Tip back then.
my father's sister and her husband ran the barge across the Jardine. real characters who loved the aussies who made the journey
And not ONE product placement for the whole doco - how refreshing !
Does an aeroplane starter motor count as product placement 😂
Great video. I love the fact they could comfortably and safely use the Cape rivers and waterways. Very few crocs back then........ most were turned into belts, shoes and luggage.
A significant observation. It’s the same with Seals and Sharks around Sydney. The old time Fisherman killed both off in numbers that boggle the imagination
The Leyland’s were ahead of their time! Great video!
Absolutely incredible video. I can't believe they did all this with the family along, too! I would have turned around probably on the first day.
Absolute legends,it’s amazing where we’ve come from in this country
This is amazing I’m in awe
These vehicles should be museum pieces!
These vehicles are probably still running mate, it’s the new Chinese owned Land Rovers that are completely unreliable, bloody disgraceful vehicles.
Walking through those creek's I was like Crocs for sure.
I just did a rego check on AYI077 it come back still registered as a 1989 WHITE LAND ROVER 110 SERIES
Some one got hold of the plates, and is keep the dream alive.
They done this trip in 1972 I think. In The first of the series 3 and series 3a landrovers from 1970 to 1980. 1980 to 1983 stage 1 v8 109 inch. 110 started in 1983
You got to love those old land rovers.
They Just keep going. With An absurd amount of maintance lol.
When the leyland brothers sold AYI077, my family bought it and had it up until 2010. We really miss the old girl
Australia seemed such are larger, wilder place back then, it certainly was a different time....and not a soft road posh SUV anywhere in sight
Absolutely fantastic - shows what is possible.
This why I bought a Land Rover...Disco and Defender
My fathers mate did it between 1970-4, not exactly sure what year, he also has footage of crossing the jardine with it up pretty high over the bonnet.
Feels like we're all in it together
what an adventure!
Orsome thanks for sharing the old memories
at school in the 70`s a mate would say
,"where do you recon we are mike ,
Me ,
buggered if i know mal "
standard answer for near 45 years ,,,
man that stuck !
Bloody Fantastic!
Amazing that this clip has been up for a year. About 10 years ago, I put up a 6 minute clip the leyland brothers did of some hang gliding and had one of the leyland brothers hassle me to take it down - I said no because it fell under the fair use laws. next thing I had channel 7 lawyers contact my sporting club and also hassle me out.
wow dude seriously 😐
@@jesusislukeskywalker4294 yeah, it was before copyright holders could flag your video and take all the monetization it made - so things are different now.
@@jesusislukeskywalker4294 yep - I even suggested to him that he could capitalize on his archival footage by allowing people to do " then and now" you tube vids - and he could then grab the monetization but no - he couldnt see it.
Exactly what Tanny said below, bloody awesome 😎
WOW GOOD OLD DAYS
Love this idea guys. A name suggestion you could call the show The Dirt, as in dishing up the dirt on all things 4wd in the dirt. Sorry to mansplain that one.
I have noticed the click bait getting worse with SKT as well as Tyler Thompson and Elnic as well.
Just driving through with next to no gear, awesome.
Bloody amazing, just did the Cape 2 weeks ago much easier now!
I remember watching this as a kid. Still think its amazing. With wives. And kids. And dogs. In thongs!!
Just legendary
Some serious off roading, and no locking diffs or snorkels!
That’s a pace we should do off road you get too see more and chill
23:00; That 40 Series wagon must have been a rare beast even then:
Those Tyers are the olden days treps
Fantastic👍🏻
We saw them at the Coorong when they had the 4wds and again when they had the orange kombis
They travelled everywhere with A/C. Remarkable.
Now THAT'S a Farkn spider!
I did the Cape in 55’ on a borrowed push bike.
That two pack vulcanising rubber looks the biz.
Imagine going off-road and fording rivers without a Safari snorkel...geez the market is full of poser rubbish that most people don’t use, and even less need.
Ubiquitous working footwear - the humble thong - totally acceptable if mismatched in size, colour or ownership
Legends
Notice!
No snorkels!
Fabulous!!
Great!
Obviously with a road already there people had been there before...THAT would have been a docco...building that road
Pretty advanced for '72
These guys really were trend setters. “Ask the Leyland brothers”. I remember watching this as kid . I’m 65 now!
me too, when i lived in Brisbane, i went out and bought a FJ40 had some great fun on the beaches, and i am a Pom!
Damn thats a good age,I'm just over the HALF CENTURY mark and I'm so happy i made it this far lmbo🤣👍🇬🇧
I'd imagine that cute blonde-haired moppet is in her mid-50s now
eles eram muito bons
Travel all over the countryside, ask the Leyland brothers.
No lockers , no 100ah batteries . I salute these people .
no diff locks neither...
Land Rover. Centre Diff Lock was standard.
@@franksandbeans2519 These are part time 4x4. So no need for a centre diff and by extension diff lock. I believe it is the lack of cross axle lockers that is the miracle.
@@barneybarret6088 Good Point. I was thinking too new. Eg: Defenders.
Damn LR series still kicked along nicely though.
Would have loved to see a Range Rover do the same trip.
Yeah you dont need that shit mate. Its about being smart
total respect for these leyland boys, no macho, ego, swearing every second etc etc. oldschool , respect !!!!
They should repeat this stuff, so much better than the total junk on TV today.
Absolutely Great Documentaries By The Leyland Brothers A Bit Dated 49 Years Ago But Still Well Worth Watching!🙂🤠🚘🏞️🌳🌴🐊🐍🇦🇺
I concur
Bullshit programs with bullshit ads
Agree for sure.
Totally agree! those were the days
Agree with you Mate. This is true blue adventure, the real deal without all the BS that you see today. CHEERS👍🍺🥧
Was a family ritual as a kid - we'd all crowd around the black and white to watch the latest episode of The Leyland Brothers...
@ 12:35 mark. With these deadly Red Back spiders there is no point in taking any risks.... pan to a guy in short-shorts, no socks and tennis shoes. Yea Mate!
What is this? No Product Placements no Cooking Segments. Its like they watched off-roading shows back then for the actual off-roading
Should watch some john rooth.
@@mrrhody7234 yeah i have syarted getting back into his Old 4wd Action stuff now
@@J-P88 yeah, he is reposting some stuff
World was a bette replace back rhen
I grew up watching these legends on a Sunday nite at 630 while Mum cooked and Dad sat on the lounge drinking beer fast track 40 years later it’s me on the lounge with the kids streaming it to the TV. The sense of adventure is timeless 👍
exactly - I remember in the early 80's watching these on I think Channel 7 on a Saturday night, and also the Malcolm Douglas specials, and I also when i was maybe 12-13 went to a local theater to watch the Albi Mangles movie....Best memories....
No idiots talking on walkie talkies to each other about a slight slight bump they managed to cross with full diff locks on.
Yeh...dullard 4WD programs yapp yapping on the 2way as they drive in ultra comfort with every luxury and form of technology...always wearing throngs cos they're never gonna stray far from their security blankets. Cmon.... let's get back to real adventure...and not Bear Grylls crap
It's so embarrassing. I agree.
Well they have that technology available now, why not use it?
@@mark2073 Sure...go ahead and use it.Enjoy the experience. But please don't compare it to the challenges of very basic equipment, mechanics and knowing where the hell you are and so forth. Maps were inaccurate, roads generally non-existent, asking for prior experience in these regions, safety support.... You gotta give due credit to those who did it under these early conditions. Without them, where's the excitement? My mates and I were 18 when we travelled to the tip of Cape York in 1975 in our 1958 Land Rover. Very different to doing the same trip today. There's an improved road, a car ferry, roadhouses, loads of other people doing the same trip, satellite communications.... So glad we could do it in 75. What a trip we had
@@intricacy9490 I agree totally, I lament every time a road is paved. Not just because of the loss of adventure but because of all the new people and "development" it brings in. I drove the San Felipe (Baja California) road south many times decades ago, man that was quite an amazing adventure through the Mexican desert. Now it's paved as of last year. It washes out every now and then, I can only hope that funding dries up and the bridges don't get repaired, that will keep the tourists away.
I'm fixing up a 1982 BJ60 and I will disconnect as much electrical as possible, making it fully manual. But I'll still have high tech accessories like GPS. And lockers although they aren't really high tech. If the tech is available I say use it, but set up the vehicle and trip so it doesn't depend on it.
Leyland brothers and Malcome Douglas were loungeroom legends in the 70s & 80s
Now it also seems, we can't watch a simple 4x4 video without being smacked in the face with
dubstep or some other god awful music.
So where can I find a woman as tough as these lasses that would even start such a raw adventure?
I guess the dodo bird isn't the only thing that's extinct!
Marvelous home movies, loved every moment!
Good to see that they had their Aussie safety thongs on.
Ha awesome….. no cowboys smashing the shit out of everything in their monster trucks
One thumbs down must be from a 79 cruiser owner
Aye, and the other 12 have kicked in as well
[ ;- )
Typical.
Lol back then there was none of this brand loyalty bs that weak ego,s live by today.
It was about adventure not what shit car you drive
I own a 79 now, used to own Landrover and despite how much of a piece of shit it was I still gave this video a thumbs up! I respect the challenge of taking a Landrover into the bush! ☺️
Yeah the 79ers couldn't handle no aircon
Old school 4wd at its best. Go the Leylands!😁
IF U AINT GOT LOCKERS FRONT AND BACK, STAY HOME ON THE PORCH!!!
oh such a refreshing comparing to the nowadays spoilt overlanders..
90%of 4 wheelers these days would have thrown the towel in long ago even with all the new mod cons of lockers, lifts, skids winches and recovery equipment etc, amazing perseverance good work guys 👍
Agree, see my comment above
What’s the bet they fabricated and fitted all the gear themselves, but didn’t mention that because they probably thought no one would be interested.
The 10% of 4WDs that are up for the job these days are almost exclusively Toyota Landcruisers. According to my mate who works in Outback North Queensland you don't see much else. Maybe the odd Nissan Patrol.
Think of it this way. The new toys made off roading and experiencing these beautiful outdoors accessible to 10x as many people (myself included).
Love seeing these nostalgic episodes, and seeing what it was like then. I wasn't even born when they did this trip. It was amusing to learn that in 1972, winches weren't even available to buy off the shelves, as well as tyre puncture repair kits we have now. Goes to show how we 4WDers got it easy now. Thanks for sharing.
They actually used an early 'tyre repair kit' @5:34 Surprised they had that back then...
I was 1yo. Watched them as a kid....
That amount of work and repairs etc..
If that was me i would be swearing and throwing stuff around.
Not these guys, they never look upset or angry.
It's great to watch
This show and other adventurers are pretty-well responsible for the popularity of the whole 4wd movement in Australia. My favourite show when I was a kid.
Old shows like this made you feel like doing something like that 👍
Back in the Day, the Brothers lived in Dumaresq Street, Newcastle so not far from our High School. Our family had enjoyed the weekend lifestyle that Land Rovers could offer since the mid Sixties so I distinctly remember walking past the Brother's garage and seeing these two Landys being prepared for this epic adventure. The stand out feature was the cut out mudguards and huge tyres which were a memorable sight for a schoolboy back then.
Those were the days when Australia was great - Leylands, Alby Mangels, et al.
What I remember of Alby was the girls he had with him. Stunning model types, usually two at a time. Whatever he had, they wanted it.
I wonder what happened to Alby? Maybe the me-too brigade got him.
@@lawrieyoutube4375 I think he's living on a little island in Micronesia under a false name. Travels back to Australia for medical checks.
@@einfelder8262 Mostly for penicillin possibly. No that was snarky, whatever he is doing, good on him. Thanks for the info.
7:10 Just when I thought it couldn't get any tougher, they whip out a kid.
My hat goes off to you sir.
The kid was Steve Irwin
Classic l grew up watching the Leyland brothers anything we did that was bush orientated was called doing a Leyland still is today ...along with Malcom Douglas these guys were the ultimate adventure people ...true Aussie legend's.....
That's right, mate 👍
Try dragging a modern 4x4 through that river. No way it would start on the other bank. All electronics buggered.
the reason they still sell the Landcruiser 70 in Australia.
Well derp wish we could buy em here in USA!a LL WE HAVE IS GIRLY BOY TRUCKS .! And they cost as much as a house for cripe. sakes !
thing is you could not do that trip as it was then in a modern 4wd. Because todays vehicles are so complicated, you couldn't just replace this, jerryrig that. We'd be talking about replacing this module and a whole encased structure rather than repairing or replacing the thing that was actually broken
The good old days men were men, women were women, kids were kids and 4x4’s were 4x4’s
the only genuine 4w drive show that you will ever see. very sad how the leyland brothers ended up.
A lot of people got rich on the inspiration of the Leyland bros
I didnt hear them mention Crocs once, maybe thats when they were all getting shot .....Mar 2021 the BIG ROCK(Leyland Bros World) on the Highway north of Newcastle is no more its been pulled down what a sad sight
Yes, an old mate of mine was making a living shooting Crocks then, he's passed on now but his prediction was we'd forever regret letting an "apex" predator become so protected. I now live on the Cape, don't ever consider a swim in ocean or rivers, even though it's tempting...
@Master Yoshi weather mid year is perfect, May is usually the start of tourist season but can vary due to late wet season which can keep the rivers up and roads closed. Climate here is nights never really cold days warm to hot that time of year while the South is freezing their butts off. Perfect, and perfect is good enough...
Dennis from the Post Master General was smart. He didn’t have balloon radials on his truck.
Cant do this now unless you own a $140,000 4x4 with a team of people to wash your Vehicle off every 100K,s so you can get mega UA-cam shot for likes and expected revenue stream!
I remember The leylands first movie. "Wheels across the desert" 1968? West to East with a bottle of Indian Ocean water to tip into the Pacific at Byron Bay. Fantastic.
landrovers at their best, uptown the challenge and so proud looking! Just lovely
Until a Toyota had to rescue them lol
Unbelievable guys true legends absolutely brilliant footage with family and pets with very basic equipment lost for word's
Evidently crocks weren't an issue back then (in the Jardine). Must have been at the point when crock hunting nearly wiped out the creatures. I wouldn't like to see anyone's chances of walking through that strech of water these days.
"Next, mix the two part cold vulcanising rubber compound...." with your hands!?!?!
ha ha no WHS back then, although back then it probably meant use your common sense -
My first 4wd was a landy 2a as i loved watching the leyland bros as a kid, just restored a 88" 2a and enjoy driving it more than my new 200 series
Might have much in the way of creature comforts in the old land rovers,but they were tough.........usually had to replace the axles with army issue ones
These are the people that Shaun Wales and Graham Cahill wish they were
And as a 4x4 loving Brit Graham and Shauno are the people I wish I was!
But never will be
My wife, our 10 year old son and I ventured up that track way back in 1984 in our short wheel base Toyota. It really was a track back then. One river crossing consisted of a raft made up of 44 gallon drums - one vehicle at a time pushed by as many volunteers who were game enough to go in with the crocodiles!
So good and that winch 🤦♂️ was just hoping nothing broke while they stood that close, thanks for sharing this with toe world
Fantastic TV show when it was made, great to see it uploaded today, many thanks for taking the time to do so.
Last one I saw was Mal and his wife going to the tip in their 100 series LC, and compared to this it seemed like a picnic!
Nothing seemed to phase these guys. That river was uncrossable by car, let’s face it, but they did it anyway!
Love the lack of Health and Safety nonsense. In those days you were free to do what you wanted and if you stuffed up and hurt yourself everyone knew who to blame.
Love the Leyland Brothers. Grew up watching all their shows.❤️❤️❤️👍😊
Loved the Leyland Brothers films, back when travelling Australia was still an adventure and you had to rely on your own initiative to get yourself unstuck. Not like today's bitumised roads and help just a phone call away...
If ever you see someone bragging about there drive to the Cape, show them this.
Oh for lockers back then! I'm a Toyota bloke, but I salute the Rover after that video!
I reckon I saw some of this in 1971 in "Across The Top". It was shown in our shire hall for the school.
Yep ask the Leyland Brother's they were the best ever an still unbeaten