[2] It currently occupies an area of 2,479 square kilometres (957 sq mi) and carries approximately 20,000 head of cattle.
Paul and Florence Beebe drew Ucharonidge lease in a land ballot in 1948.
[4] By 1951 Ucharonidge, and most of the Northern pastoral lands, were struck by a serious drought, with bushfires destroying 300 square miles (777 km2) and killing over 2,000 head of cattle.
Mick Beebe died in 2004 after years spent improving the herd at Ucharonidge.
[5] In 2008 the Consolidated Pastoral Company acquired Ucharonidge from the Beebe family[6] paying about A$28 million.