Some time afterwards, Bush travelled to Western Australia, where he worked for eighteen months as a
jackaroo on
Murgoo Station. After taking a cargo of horses to
Mauritius, he spent six months from October 1879 to March 1880 exploring north of the
Gascoyne River. He later took up a number of sheep and cattle stations in the area including
Bidgemia, Clifton Downs and
Mount Clere Stations, becoming a leading
Gascoyne pastoralist. He also became interested in gold
prospecting, and joined the
gold rush to the
Yilgarn after the discovery of gold there in 1887. He was instrumental in the purchase of the land for the
WACA (Western Australia Cricket ground), as he joined with other people in purchasing the original land there. In 1889, Bush became a
justice of the peace, and in December of the following year, he became a nominated member of Western Australia's first
Legislative Council under
responsible government, which position he held until his resignation in July 1893. In January 1893, he married a widow named Constance Harper (née Lochee); she died three years later. ==Return to England==