NEWS&REVIEWS
AUSTRALIA’S #1 TRUCK MARKETPLACE TradeTrucks.com.au 249
By 1956, the Ryan’s had a 27hp (20kW) A5
Bedford with a single diff that towed an eight-
wheel dog trailer. The bought another, with
Andrew’s mother Nell also getting behind the
wheel.
“We were only little kids and mum would stop at
Port Wakefield and get our milk bottles filled up.
“When we took off she’d reckon that either the
bottles weren’t big enough or Ardrossan was too
far because one would run out before the other
and there would be a hell of a fight to get the
other bottle, like kids do,” Anthony says.
It was a real family concern — everyone was on
the trucks: Mum, Dad and the kids.
Anthony still remembers how his parents built
their original home out of poured concrete. Pat
and Nell carted the gravel with their old Chev out
of the Wakefield River at Balaklava. They would
shovel it into the concrete mixer and then bucket
it up into the formwork.
“You can still see the board marks,” Anthony
says. “Those were the hard days.
“When I left school I only did three days a week
because I would rather be doing things with my
hands than my head.
“I worked on a farm, then Dad unfortunately got
crook. We had trucks working for the highways
department on the construction of the Broken Hill
road over four to five years.”
BRANCHING OUT
Anthony returned home and spent a couple of
years working for local carrier Bruce Agnew.
His first long distance trip was to Longreach,
hauling cattle.
Anthony and Barry later bought Bruce’s 1968
C1800 International, powered by a 160hp
(119.3kW) Cummins. It came with a 34-foot (10m)
strap trailer with grain bins, a stock crate and
$5,000 worth of goodwill.
Barry had completed a mechanics’
apprenticeship and the two brothers worked
together with a Bedford and the C1800
International, still trading as PJ & NM Ryan.
After selling the C1800 and the Bedford,
Anthony and Barry bought a couple of cab-over
TranStars from Bunker Freight Lines in Adelaide.
After five years of grain, fertiliser and general
interstate, Barry traded his TranStar in on a 350
Cummins-powered 1979 Atkinson, around the
same time when Anthony bought the K125.
“I was doing grain and fertiliser. In between that
the truck was working with Clare Quarries out of
the Spalding quarry. I went as far north as Copley,
east to Olary, south to Tailem Bend and west to
Pimba carting road mix.”
Anthony’s sons Dwayne and Kain have also
joined the Ryans generation in transport. They
both work for McArdle Freight in Bute driving
Western Stars, predominantly running up the
centre to Darwin, while Anthony carts fertiliser
and grain for Ashley and Kaylene Robinson of
Robinson Farms, Hoyleton.
In a convenient arrangement, the couple’s son
Tom Robinson drives the old K125 for Anthony.
The Kenworth had done 420,000km when
Anthony bought it and the rig has now done 2.6
million with many more to come.
One thing Anthony is sure of is that if he ever
did buy another truck, it would be a Kenworth.
I’m sure it’s a
Wednesday
truck
- The Kenworth K125 in its usual pig trailer
combination - Anthony Ryan is born and bred in Halbury,
South Australia - Despite never being repainted, the K125 is still
looking good
32
DOW 399.cls 249 26/02/2016 10:02 am