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O.T. Targan misbehaving...AGAIN
Saw this on my local TV station. To good to pass up. :D
Enjoy http://www.wral.com/news/national_wo.../#/vid11687717 My $0.02 Mike |
He'll be fine. They're releasing him into the wild in a day or two they said...:D
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Targan or the kangaroo?
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how is targan misbehaving newsworthy.
on a related note is there a dash ten for care and feeding of a kangaroo assassin?:D |
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Meh, kangaroos probably seem exotic and exciting to people in other parts of the world but they're no big deal here (unles you hit one with your car or one tries to kill your dog). Many of the golf courses in my city have a resident mob of kangaroos living on them. As long as there's a bit of bush for them to shelter in at night roos will happily cross the urban-rural interface into the suburbs to feed. They basically fill a similar ecological niche to deer or antelope but they're not as smart. Marsupials in general are pretty stupid. On a slight tangent, I feel I should point out that in my profile pic you can only see me from the waist up. I'm an Australian-New Zealand duel citizen so I'm actually a kangaroo-kiwi hybrid :cool: . |
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Limited intellect and hung like a bird...? |
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Attacks on humans are rare but do occasionally occur. Kangaroos have large, strong claws on their hind feet and in a fight will lean back on their tail and strike with both feet, to devastating effect. Humans and other animals can be disembowled in such attacks. It's this sort of attack that male kangaroos use against each other to establish dominance, but they have extremely tough hide down their chests and abdomens that usually prevents major injury. I've also heard of one case (from a credible source) of a kangaroo being chased by a dog into the water at the edge of a lake and when the dog entered the water the roo trod on the dog's head and held it under the surface until it drowned. The dog's owner had to revive their unfortunate pet after scaring the roo away. |
I had a brilliant roo dog (German Shepherd) a couple of decades ago - taught himself to attack from the rear and avoid those VICIOUS hind legs. Of course he did have to learn the hard way after being nearly disemboweled when he was young.
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Wow, even Australian animals are crazy.:D
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This is what I'm talking about:
http://www.juliusbergh.com/cocky/kangaroo.jpg http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-1-zqvb-a2R...b08cd58c_o.jpg |
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im thinking go to australia, weaponise the wildlife, and take over the world.:D
(and maybe grab a couple of drinks while im there) |
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Summarizing the culls, ornithologist Dominic Serventy commented: "The machine-gunners' dreams of point blank fire into serried masses of Emus were soon dissipated. The Emu command had evidently ordered guerrilla tactics, and its unwieldy army soon split up into innumerable small units that made use of the military equipment uneconomic. A crestfallen field force therefore withdrew from the combat area after about a month.[11] ” On 8 November, representatives in the Australian House of Representatives discussed the operation.[6] Following the negative coverage of the events in the local media,[12] which included claims that "only a few" emus had died,[4] Pearce withdrew the military personnel and the guns on 8 November.[4][6][13][14] After the withdrawal, Major Meredith compared the emus to Zulus, and commented on the striking maneuverability of the emus, even while badly wounded. "If we had a military division with the bullet-carrying capacity of these birds it would face any army in the world...They can face machine guns with the invulnerability of tanks. They are like Zulus whom even dum-dum bullets could not stop.[15]" |
That emu cull happened in the Wheatbelt a few hundreds kilometres from where I live. Emus may be tough but they're also annoyingly stupid creatures. When startled they will always run in the direction with the least resistance, so if you startle one on a road with your car they just run down the road ahead of your car for miles and miles.
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http://australianmuseum.net.au/Drop-Bear http://www.dropbearaware.com/ http://www.google.com.au/url?sa=t&rc...HilxYhxeF_I1mw |
imagine an army of kangaroo's with MP5's sweeping through the kremlin though.:D
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Well today I'm allowed to misbehave because it's Halloween which is also MY BIRTHDAY! Yay!
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so to commorate the occasion...... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EqolSvoWNck My $0.02 Mike |
Today was also the anniversary of the famous charge of the Australian Light Horsemen at Beersheba, Palestine in 1917: Battle of Beersheba (1917)
We Australians like to refer to it as history's last great cavalry charge but the Light Horse Regiments were really mounted infantry. Still, it must have scared the hell out of the Ottoman Turks, seeing hundreds of Aussie horsemen charging at them with their foot-long bayonets in their hands like swords. http://freespace.virgin.net/j.frankl...-1907-pair.jpg |
how do they taste?
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happy birthday! :D |
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http://www.uscavalry.org/USCA-LastChargePrint.pdf |
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Before making any sweeping statement on this board one (such as myself) would do well to at least make a cursory web search. Thanks for schooling me, Jason. |
And further to that, the Italians and the Poles both have a claim to cavalry charges later in WW2 although the Poles were fighting for the USSR and so this charge doesn't appear to be celebrated in Poland today.
Following is from Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge_(warfare) Battle of Bataan (January 16, 1942): US 26th Cavalry Regiment makes a mounted pistol charge against Japanese positions, the last mounted charge in battle by conventional United States troops. Eastern Front, World War II, (August 24, 1942): The last cavalry charge against a regular enemy army of Italian history happened in Izbušenskij. It was mounted against a Soviet artillery position along the River Don by 700 men of the Italian 3rd 'Savoia' Cavalry Regiment. This is often reported as "the last successful cavalry charge in history". Article about this charge can be found here http://www.history.com/news/the-last...e-70-years-ago Battle of Poloj (October 17, 1942): The last charge of an Italian horse regiment during WWII. It was executed in Yugoslavia by the 14th Light Cavalry Regiment "Cavalleggeri di Alessandria" versus Communist partisans. Battle of Borujsko (Schönfeld in German) was the last charge of the Polish 1st Cavalry Brigade just before the end of WWII. On March 1, 1945, it attacked the German lines in support of Soviet Forces. The charge was successful. So we Aussies might want to claim the last horse charge in history but it definitely aint ours to claim - March 1945, the Poles have it! |
and back on topic how much trouble are targan and his pet emu actually capable of getting into?:rolleyes:
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Targan can probably get into plenty of trouble all on his own, after all, if emu's are smart enough to be elected mayor of a town...
Yes, it actually happened way back in the early 80's (can't for the life of me remember which town it was though). Edit: It was Camooweal in Queensland (trust the Queenslanders to elect an emu - these are people who don't want daylight saving because they're afraid the extra hour of sunshine will fade their curtains!) :cool: Thanks go to my mother and her amazing memory (30 years after visiting the place). |
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