In a town where the permanent population could fit comfortably into a large group chat, an athlete named Young Gun became a champion on Saturday. Not a sprinter in spikes, not a racehorse with polished pedigree papers — a camel.
Young Gun, guided by jockey Patrick Dennis, stormed to victory at the 2026 Marree Australasian Camel Cup, collecting glory in one of the planet's more delightfully unexpected sporting traditions. The event staged 13 races and drew hundreds of spectators to Marree, a remote South Australian outpost inhabited year-round by just 65 people, says Arab News.
The thing about camel racing is that it sounds like a joke until you arrive and discover that everyone involved is taking it very seriously — especially the camels.
Trainer Kyrraley Woodhouse certainly is. A participant since 2013, she builds much of her racing stable from Australia's wild camel population. Her scouting criteria sound less like animal selection and more like recruiting action-movie protagonists.
She searches for camels with "a bit of fire in them" and a "high-strung" personality. In her view, racing greatness requires the same ingredient found in racehorses: heart. Apparently, even in the desert, attitude matters.
The race itself is only part of the story. Australia's relationship with camels is one of history's more unusual plot twists.
Camels first arrived in Australia in 1840 as practical workers rather than sporting celebrities. The country's harsh interior needed transport capable of surviving brutal conditions, and camels turned out to be remarkably good employees. Between the 1840s and the 1920s, more than 10,000 animals were imported to carry supplies and people across the vast dry landscape.
By the 1860s, Muslim cameleers from Central and South Asia arrived to manage them. Their work helped shape life in Australia's interior, and many descendants of those communities still live in Marree today.
Then technology did what technology tends to do: it replaced the old system. Motor vehicles and railways rolled in during the 1920s, camels rolled out, and many animals were simply released into the wild.
That decision eventually produced one of Australia's strangest population stories. The country now hosts an estimated 300,000 to one million wild camels wandering across the landscape.
It's a strange legacy. In one setting, camels are celebrated stars charging toward a finish line while crowds cheer. In another, they create difficult environmental and economic problems, competing with livestock for food, contaminating water sources, damaging fences and affecting Indigenous cultural sites.
Left unmanaged, camel populations can double every eight years. Authorities respond with a mix of mustering, trapping animals at water points and controlled culling. Australia also keeps a small live-export trade; 68 camels have been sent to Malaysia and Indonesia so far in 2026.
Which means somewhere in Australia, one camel is collecting applause and trophies while thousands of its distant cousins are busy becoming a nationwide management headache.
For one weekend in Marree, though, the desert picked its hero.
Young Gun had already crossed the finish line. The rest of Australia was still trying to figure out what to do with the cast of supporting characters.
australia / Camel / camel jockeys
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