People before a ‘Bachelor and Spinster’ ball in South Wales. For single men and women on

Pick-up trucks, cowboy boots and a 24-hour party in the Outback: welcome to modern-day dating in Australia’s bush, where swiping right is not an option.

For single men and women on remote farms or in tiny villages, “Bachelor and Spinster” balls offer a better chance of finding love than dating apps like Tinder.

The balls, a decades-old tradition in outback Australia, still attract thousands of young adults looking for love.

“It’s very old-school,” Emily Pitt, a 24-year-old from the former gold rush town of Gulgong, tells AFP.

“It’s how country singles meet each other because you’re rural and there’s hundreds of kilometres between you.”

Surrounded by vast tracts of wheat and canola, Ariah Park, some 400 kilometres west of Sydney, is better known for grain-growing than big parties.

It has a population of just 500 and the main street — with its row of historic buildings with wide verandas — looks preserved in time.

But on the last Saturday of October the usually peaceful village is inundated with pickup trucks, which roar up to a dried-out paddock to deposit partygoers.

About 1,500 people showed up for this year’s outdoor drinking and dancing extravaganza, the second-biggest turnout in the event’s 32-year history.

While the ball has a black-tie dress code, the warm-up party is a casual affair, with people wearing scruffy T-shirts, shorts and flip flops.

“It’s just fun, you meet people, you party,” says five-time B & S partygoer Claudia Bailey, who travelled more than 200 kilometres to attend the celebration.

“We got here Friday night and haven’t slept yet so it’s just completely different, nothing like clubbing or anything. It’s just a different vibe,” the 21-year-old says.

When night falls partygoers change into their formal attire and pack into a marquee where they stomp their boots and toss their cowboy hats into the air as they dance to country rock tunes belted out by live bands.

The balls are notorious for binge drinking, casual sex and dangerous driving antics, and safety is a perennial concern for organisers.

Pre-ball entertainment once featured pickup trucks — utility vehicles known as “utes” in Australia — tearing up the paddock in ear-splitting “circle work”.

That’s now banned but “key banging” — making a vehicle backfire — has taken centre stage. Across the showground, deafening pops shatter the air.

“Mine is pretty loud, it’s pretty good, I get flames every time I do it pretty much. I get wedding proposals, I get people asking to marry me when I do it,” says Mandy Mannington, 22, from the nearby town of Marrar.

One man adds to the merriment by driving a sit-on lawn mower around in circles as smoke belches from its two vertical exhaust pipes, attracting loud cheers from onlookers.

Another reveller strolls past holding a long walking stick fashioned out of empty rum cans strapped together with duct tape, drawing shouts of “Gandalf!”.

B & S regular Jack Beehag from Sydney says he likes the easy-going atmosphere of the balls.

“You just go up and talk to anyone really,” the 20-year-old says, noting the big difference to the dating apps popular in the city that allow people to chat online.

“Everyone gets along here better.”

Medics are on standby to treat the inevitable injuries.

“Today already somebody’s had a bit of a head injury ... you get everything like people falling over, rolling their ankles, hurting their back or what not,” paramedic Aaron Savidge says.

As the festivities continue, pickup trucks turn into makeshift camps with many amorous attendees enticing someone back to their swag, an Australian-style bedroll, to spend the night.

“They used to have a sit-down dinner, strictly black tie and closed shoes,” says organiser Ned Fisher, referring to B & S balls of the past.

“Now it’s a modern sort of thing where it’s just more of a bit of a party ... People just come here and have a good time and meet new people and just really let their hair down.

 

source : gulfnews