Bloods Creek Station

Bloods Creek Station is a defunct pastoral lease that once operated as a sheep station and a cattle station in the Far North of South Australia.

The property is situated approximately 150 km north of Oodnadatta and 169 km east of Kulgera.

The traditional owners of the area are the Arunndta people, who remained on the property after the 1920s.

The lease takes its name from Bloods Creek, which has some semi-permanent waterholes. The Overland Telegraph passed near one of the waterholes.

In 1901 the state government drilled a 2002 ft bore and a large windmill was built to reach the hot sub-artesian water, which rose to within 140 ft of the surface. The property was also once an important railhead for the original Ghan railway.

In 1905 the leaseholder was John Bailes, who had introduced Angora goats to the property.

The lease was taken up by Ted Colson, the first white man to cross the Simpson Desert, in 1931. Colson ran sheep, tended the bore and ran a store. Later the lease was amalgamated into the Dalhousie pastoral company, along with Federal, Mount Dare and Dalhousie Springs leases by Edwin Lowe.