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OT Moat Monster
Here is another thought!! (Gasp, two in one day!!)
The USA has troops in Philippines. After Nuke exchange chaos would ensue. Some would surely survive, and try to help villagers. SOOO... http://news.yahoo.com/giant-crocodil...134625838.html Think up a way to keep this guy in your arsenal. Talk about keeping the average intruder honest!!!!! My $0.02 Mike |
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__________________
"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
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The vast majority of Australians live nowhere near the Croc habitats, so in that sense they are relatively rare.
However, if you go wandering about in the tropics near a river, especially one that's just a bit brackish, and chances are you're going to have a very intimate and potentially deadly encounter with one. Australian salt water crocs are nothing like alligators - the salties have no qualms at all about taking down a fully grown water buffalo, let alone a stupid tourist who's out for a dawn stroll along the riverbank. Salties are FAST too. A horse will have a hard time outrunning one in a straight line over a short distance, but salties don't corner too well at speed. I've personally seen a 20 footer swim so fast to chase off a smaller salty it effectively walked on the water.
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
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Crocodiles used to be widely hunted for their skins so the numbers of big crocs dropped sharply until the early 1970s when they became a protected species. Since then crocodile numbers have steadily increased. They're not uncommon at all. Freshwater crocodiles are like cayman, they're all but harmless. It's the Australian saltwater crocodile that's the monster. Much the same as that one they caught in the Philippines. Big, old, male Australian saltwater crocodiles can grow to in excess of 7 meters (23 feet) long and 1100kg (2420lbs) in weight.
Crocs are fairly rare near human habitations because not many people live in the far north of Australia. Its mostly fair dinkum vast, unfriendly wilderness up there. But they are seen around some towns like Broome, Darwin and Townsville. In the vast wilderness of Kakadu and in esturine areas along the northern coast you've got to be really careful. They are stealthy, patient and really fast when they are in the water or on the mud. There are at least a couple of hundred thousand salties roaming around up there. Once or twice a year we hear on the news of someone getting eaten by a croc. They scare the crap out of me.
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
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BUT... Targan, you've got to admit, it is way freaking cool to see something that looks like an early dinosaur come rising out of its' river to sun itself on the beach. And, just as an aside, did you all notice that in this report they called this croc a "he"? Unless there are obvious sexual differences between male and female crocs, such as differences between male and female lions, some one had to LOOK.... Now, that person had some REAL cahones!!! My $0.02 Mike |
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
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WOW!!
Here in North America, we do not get any pedator THAT big. On land, a large, male polar bear would probably be biggest, Some where around 7 feet tall when standing, about 1600-2000 pounds. Now that I think about it, I guess it is possible that off the coast of California, there might be some Great White Sharks in the same size frame as this guy. Killer Whales also.... I was reading a follow up to the original article. Some of the villagers near the area where this thing was captured say that there is a BIGGER one.... Somewhere nearby..... I guess to hunt (read capture) something THAT big, you nead Crocodile Dundee AND Steve Irwin..... My $0.02 Mike |
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