So, you have jumped on Google and searched for agriculture jobs in Australia, and here you are.
If you are looking to get your visa signed off, get a decent sum of cash in the bank, or have a working holiday on an Australian farm, ag is where it is at.
But there are some serious expectations and responsibility behind that.
Firstly, you need to have clear communication and understanding of Australian language and instructions.
It is one of the biggest reasons you will be rejected for work in ag, and it is for a good reason.
It is dangerous.
Our farmers are not looking for steering wheel attendants who think the job is just sitting in an air-conditioned cab watching Netflix.
You will be responsible for operating million-dollar-plus machinery.
One second of lapsed attention, one moment, and you can cause $50k through to millions worth of damage.
We want to give you a reality check, and by doing so, we can help you be trusted with the best gear in the country.
Now, if your English is poor and you cannot reply to an email with clear communication, you would be better off working in a pub in the remote communities.
Actually, if you are not from farming back home, you are probably best to go with fruit picking or working in bars.
Alright, you are still here?
Let us see if we can help you.
If you are only chasing a visa sign-off and do not actually care about the job, farmers will see that pretty quickly.
If you are serious, switched on and willing to learn, there can be unreal opportunities.
Coming to Australia and working on Aussie farms can be an amazing experience, but it can also be a very bad experience.
Operating farm machinery in Australia is not an easy holiday job.
A new John Deere or Case IH header is over the $1 million mark, and to operate this bit of gear, you have a lot of responsibilities.
It does not take much at harvest for everything to go wrong.
If you are just looking for a job, you are a liability.
We are looking for workers who have had some farm experience, are trustworthy, and treat the gear like they own it.
If you are travelling and you want to come to Australia to work in ag, it very well may be the best thing you have ever experienced.
We see time and time again two things.
Number one is that you will build forever long-term relationships with that farmer.
The second thing is that it will be the worst experience.
In Australia, there are good and bad farmers.
To get the good and enjoy the experience, you will need to read between the lines a bit.
To do so, you need clear English.
If there is a language barrier, it simply will not work, and my advice would be to work in a remote pub.
So, have your English nailed down.
The next thing is to have some form of farming experience. Many growers often require this.
The reason is simple: you have experience.
The next thing is to have an Australian driver’s licence and your own transport.
Now, that is the basics broken down, and now comes the really important stuff.
If a farmer does not feel confident with you but it will work, you will be given the job, but the tasks will be less enjoyable.
If the farmer is confident in you, they will give you great opportunities.
Do not take on this work thinking you will be able to slack off and drag your feet, as you will more than likely be sent packing.
Working on a farm is dusty, hot and long hours.
Working with a harvest crew, you live together, eat together, sleep in the same building, and do this for months.
If you do not pull your weight, are dirty, or are a difficult person, you will ruin the dynamic for everyone.
We work 14 to 16 hours a day, 7 days a week, when the weather is good.
It is a mental game as much as a physical one.
Wheat harvest jobs can mean long days, dust, pressure, machinery, teamwork, communication and staying alert when everyone is tired.
Working on a cotton farm, whether it is irrigation or picking, you are often dealing with different and extremely long hours, trying to dodge the heat in the north.
It is not a 9-to-5.
It is more like working 19-hour days, having a sleep in the heat of the day, then working through the night when it comes to irrigating.
The common factor is that we work hard and for long hours.
We need operators who can do a 14-hour day and still be alert enough not to wrap a header front around a tree.
If you are not comfortable with the heat, the flies or the grind, please do not apply.
But if you can, you will make the best mates and the best money of your life.
Farmers who have agriculture jobs in Australia are not looking for steering wheel attendants.
They are looking for people who can be trusted.
They want someone who respects the gear, communicates clearly, takes instruction, works safely and understands the pressure of the season.
There is a big difference between wanting a farm job and being someone a farmer can trust with the best gear in the country.
These resources may help workers understand agriculture job options, working rights, visas, harvest work and farm safety before applying.
We hope a job in Aussie ag suits you.
We hope you come over and build a lifetime of memories and make some lifelong mates.
So get your ducks in a row and come over and have some fun with us, because no one does it like us Aussies.
Feel free to watch some of our videos on our socials to see what it is all about.
We know how to cook!
You can look for agriculture jobs through farm networks, harvest job services, job boards, local contacts and agricultural platforms. Before applying, make sure you can communicate clearly, understand the work and have the right working rights.
Not always, but for serious machinery roles, farming or machinery experience makes a big difference. If you want to operate headers, tractors, cotton gear or other expensive machinery, farmers need to trust you.
Wheat harvest jobs are usually long, dusty, hot and high-pressure. You may work 14 to 16-hour days when the weather is good, and you need to stay alert around expensive machinery.
Cotton farm jobs can involve irrigation, picking, machinery, heat and long hours. Some work may happen at night or around the heat of the day, especially in northern regions.
Farmers look for workers who communicate clearly, respect machinery, listen properly, work safely, handle long hours, get along with the crew and take responsibility for their mistakes.
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