This man plays the last post to a different fallen Anzac every day

At the foot of the Snowy Mountains on a cool, drizzly day, the stillness at Tumut cemetery is cut by the sound of a familiar and stirring tune.Bugler Adam Farquharson is serenading the graves of veterans with the Last Post — something he does at a different grave, every day.Despite playing the song thousands of times, Adam still gets nervous every Anzac Day, when he is asked to play."Without a lie — you don't really know how it's going to go until you finish," he said.Each day, Adam heads to a graveyard and walks through looking for a serviceman or woman's grave — usually marked with a white headstone or bronze plate.He then plays the Last Post, recites the Ode of Remembrance, then plays The Rouse or Reveille.He also places a small rock, painted with a poppy by Adam and his daughters as a memento, onto the grave.Adam's father and grandfathers served in the armed forces Came up to the cemetery every day to practice after work, [but] once it came to Anzac Day, I thought, why stop?" he said.Since then every day of the year in the rain, hail, or shine, Adam has played at 104 different cemeteries around the country as far north as Darwin.Even away from home, he takes the bugle and responsibility with him.This Anzac Day, Adam will have played for 819 days in a row.