Bullocky, bullock driver, teamster... call them what you will, there aren't many left these days.

Rohan Morris from Gleneden, outside Gayndah in Queensland, is one of just a handful of people left in Australia who run a working bullock team to cart timber.

His property has been in the family for 103 years, and home to a bullock team for about 15.

In a rural world that's losing workers, and where workplace health and safety is becoming a more worrying responsibility, the relationship being man and beast seems to be weakening.

But Mr Morris invests all his time in building natural, primal relationships with the cattle that work his property.

He says he's different, but he wouldn't have it any other way.

"There's no real useful reason to be driving a bullock team when trucks and tractors can do the same thing so much faster... but I enjoy working with animals... if nobody was driving bullocks it would be gone, it would be lost.

"Somebody's got to do it and I'm glad that somebody is me."

Mr Morris opens his property to the public to view his working bullock team.