Sarah captures photos along the way, often using a timer.
PHOTOGRAPHY SARAH WHEELER AND NICK MANCHEE
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After the devastating loss of her parents, Sarah Wheeler channelled her grief into a 5500 kilometre horseback journey.
PHOTOGRAPHY SARAH WHEELER AND NICK MANCHEE
We have just sent the latest Graziher x Rabobank Diary to the printers and we think this one is something special. Not only does it have all the important country dates, our 2026 hardcover diary is full to the brim with beautiful photographs from the pages of your favourite magazine. Valued at $49.99, the diary is free with every new subscription (diaries will be posted in early October).
Our cover star this time around is Sarah Wheeler, who fronted one of our most-loved magazines (Issue 42, Dec/Jan 24-25). In that issue, writer Keryn Donnelly caught up with Sarah as she hit the six-month mark of her 5500 kilometre horseback trek, a journey she took to raise awareness of upper gastrointestinal cancers.
Sarah completed her trip in Rowena, in northern New South Wales, in February. She raised more than $500,000 for the Pancare Foundation and her own charity, A Daughter’s Way, which supports rural families experiencing grief. Since then, she’s been working on a cattle station in the Kimberley and has travelled internationally.
In a recent Instagram post, Sarah explained that the trek did not heal the grief of losing her parents, but it did offer an important lesson. “Grief cannot be healed,” she wrote. “But it did show me that both grief and joy can coexist, and that I can carry them both and still do hard yet beautiful things.” Words to remember as we start planning for the year ahead.
The article that follows first appeared in the Dec/Jan 24-25 issue of Graziher magazine.
Before Sarah Wheeler set out on her 5500 kilometre trek to honour her late parents, she rigged up her mum’s old horse float with solar panels and power outlets so she would have somewhere to sleep each night.
She’s hardly had to use it. As she’s travelled through some of the most isolated regions of Queensland and New South Wales, people she’s never met before have opened up their homes — and their hearts — to her.
“I’ve slept more nights in a bed than I have in my swag,” Sarah tells Graziher, while she’s enjoying two rest days at Moree in northern New South Wales, six months into her trek, having covered more than 3200 kilometres.
Property owners have not only invited her into their homes but they have also played a game of phone tag, calling ahead to their neighbours to make sure she has a place to stay for the following night. “Some of them haven’t even been home at the time. They’ve just said, ‘Here’s where we keep the key, let yourself in and make yourself at home.’”
The 27-year-old grew up on a property outside Rowena, a small town in the far north-east of New South Wales, with her mum, Therese (Terri), her dad, Gavin, and her three sisters Emily, now 28, Jessie, 25, and Millie, 22. When Sarah was 12 years old, Gavin, 46, died suddenly. “He had an enlarged heart. He didn’t know about it and we didn’t know about it. One day his heart just stopped. It gave out,” Sarah says.
Sarah captures photos along the way, often using a timer.
PHOTOGRAPHY SARAH WHEELER AND NICK MANCHEE
Sarah and her mother, Terri.
PHOTOGRAPHY SARAH WHEELER AND NICK MANCHEE
For the next ten years, Terri ran the farm with the help of her daughters. In 2021, at the height of the pandemic, Sarah travelled to the Pilbara to spend a year working on a remote cattle station. She was out on the tractor one day when her sister called to say Terri had been diagnosed with an upper gastrointestinal (UGI) cancer. The cancer was aggressive and within a few weeks, Sarah travelled home to be by her mother’s side for her final days.
In the months following their 56-year-old mother’s death, the four Wheeler sisters arranged for some close family friends to lease the farm. It was around this time that Sarah decided she wanted to honour her parents and raise awareness about UGI cancer so, inspired by Hollywood movies such as Tracks, she began planning her own trek.
Her first task was finding the horses, Shifty and Sally, who have been by her side every step of the way.
“I feel as though my parents sent me those horses,” says Sarah. Shifty, the gelding, came first. Sarah spotted him at a sale in Armidale, New South Wales, and instantly fell in love with the way he moved. She spoke to his owners and they let her ride him before the sale the next day.
“As soon as I sat in the saddle on him, I just felt at home and safe and like it was meant to be,” she says. “And that day was the anniversary of Dad’s passing.”
One of the last photos of Terri with her four daughters.
PHOTOGRAPHY SARAH WHEELER AND NICK MANCHEE
Sarah with a joey she met along the way.
PHOTOGRAPHY SARAH WHEELER AND NICK MANCHEE
A few months later, she took Shifty to a campdraft, where one of her mum’s friends introduced her to a mare named Sally. “She’s golden, like the sun, and she’s resilient, just like Mum.”
The next steps were rigging up the horse float and organising a support vehicle and a roster of drivers to accompany her. She’s already used 20 different support drivers, with kind strangers stepping in along the way.
Setting off in February 2024, Sarah has travelled through some of the most isolated regions of New South Wales and Queensland. From here, she will trek through the Central West, Riverina and Hay Plain regions of New South Wales, stopping to spend Christmas with her extended family in Dubbo before arriving back at Rowena in February. She hopes others will join her on the final leg, as a fitting tribute to Terri and Gavin.
“I’d really love to have one more day and invite as many people as I can to come out and ride their horses with me from my place to the Rowena pub.”
To donate to UGI cancer research, or to offer your support in another way, visit The Long Outback Ride or follow Sarah on Instagram.
After the devastating loss of her parents, Sarah Wheeler channelled her grief into a 5500 kilometre horseback journey.
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