[3] Droughts followed but in 1909 it experienced the best season since 1896, with wildflowers blooming across the grazing lands and 300 cattle being overlanded down from the Kimberley region.
[3] The property was put up for auction in 1920 when it occupied an area of 755,100 acres (305,578 ha) and was stocked with approximately 1,100 head of cattle.
[4] Still owned by Routledge and Co. it had 18 wells, a homestead, approximately 25 acres (10 ha) of miners' cottages and special leases and five town blocks.
[5] By 1925 the property had been acquired by Hawker, Chomley and Co., who were expanding neighbouring Sturt Meadows Station and were stocking both with sheep from the eastern states.
[7] The company formed by the group, Pinnacles Proprietary Limited, appointed a new manager named McKinnon to run the 760,000-acre (307,561 ha) station, which had recently had a new homestead constructed and was building a new shearing shed.