From Troy Cassar-Daley dedicating a song to his V8 Holden to a stripper’s pole flipping upside down, the highly-anticipated return of the Deniliquin Ute Muster on the weekend lived up to its raucous and much-loved reputation.
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The biggest show-stopper was the ‘Golden Nugget’ — a Ford Falcon AU custom built for the 2022 muster by mates Josh Moschetti and Chris Hansen.
The 27-year-old Yarra Valley rev-heads were the centre of camp gossip on Friday when word got around someone in the ute paddock had turned up with a stripper’s pole attached to their ute tray.
It only got better when the Golden Nugget flipped upside down during the first round of racing on Saturday morning, copping some nasty panel damage, an oil spill and shocking veteran muster-goers who’d never seen a rollover before.
Punters can breathe a sigh of relief — the pole survived the assault and lives to work another day
“We’ve been to the Deni Ute Muster before, but this is the first time we’ve driven in it,” Mr Hansen said after his rollover.
“This whole car was built just for this Deni. It was my first time racing it — can you tell?”
The Golden Nugget got to re-do its barrel race and went on to compete in several other events on the Saturday.
Darcie Cummins from Cohuna attended the Deni Ute Muster with friends and family.
“I usually camp in the ute paddock but this is my mum’s first Deni and I didn’t want to scare her off,” Ms Cummins said.
“Over here in the family camping area — it’s so bloody quiet.”
By midday Friday, Ms Cummins had already heard about the Golden Nugget.
“Yeah I heard a guy was up there in his jocks. The ute next to it is really good too, it’s got massive speakers on the back,” she said.
The pole was apparently very popular with the men, who didn’t mind performing a dance or two.
Over in ‘Club Med’ (a special reserved area for workers) the old guard had also heard about the Golden Nugget by Friday lunch.
“I heard there was a stripper’s pole in the back of someone’s ute over in the feral paddock,” surveyor Ken Bates said.
“The best I’ve ever seen was a toilet seat on a ute’s tow-ball. That was it. Just a bag underneath. It was foul.”
Mr Bates’ job is to arrive early and GPS map the area to plan where everything will be set up.
“My job is full-on for three days before the ute muster, then I sit back and cook for the boys,” he said.
“I mark out where the campsites are, paint the lines and that sort of thing.”
Also at Club Med were refuellers ‘Nudge’ and ‘Wardy’.
“The people who camp at Club Med are the one’s who pretty much set everything up — all the buildings, all the diesel,” Nudge said.
“It’s the same 10 blokes every year — we can’t get any other bastards to help.”
The essential workers arrive a week or two before the Deni Ute Muster to begin transforming the plains into a festival ground.
“My job is to keep filling everything with fuel,” Nudge said.
“I can be going 12 hours a day just filling things — we use about 7000 litres in a weekend. The best we’ve ever done was 14,000 litres on the Cold Chisel weekend. That was a big one.”
Diesel generators are the backbone of the Deni Ute Muster, supplying power to everything from the main stage to floodlights over the port-a-loo blocks.
“The festival has access to mains power, but they’ll never be able to get enough out here,” Nudge said.
Deniliquin has a population of 8000.
More than 20,000 people attended the 2022 Deni Ute Muster on Friday, September 30 and Saturday, October 1.