creepy crawlys creep the crap outa me . . . . i liked the gater
I think you might mean the goanna... this is a lizard, not an alligator or crocodile... a bloody big lizard, grant you, but just a lizard.
We don't have alligators in Aus, we have 2 types of crocodiles. Freshwater crocs (freshies) are smaller, have a thinner snout and are generally a bit more quiet and shy. The scary ones are the Saltwater crocs (salties). They're nasty little buggers who seem to like the taste of human flesh. They can grow up to 20 feet or more long and weigh a couple of tons. They're clever and will use a behaviour pattern (such as going to the creek for water at the same time each day) to lay an ambush. They don't need to eat every day and they can go without food for months in the right conditions. For this reason you should keep in mind that just because you don't see a croc right away doesn't mean that they're not there... they're just not hungry.... ... yet.
Here's a little freshie that is kept in a fishtank at our local zoo. He's only a baby, and getting a little too big for the tank. He'll be replaced by one of his little brothers soon and let go in the enclosure with all his bigger relatives.
We always swam with shoes on as kids, those sunken beer cans/bottles can do some real damage. That was the thing we feared.
Funnily enough, for all the poisonous things and other various bities that we have in our waters, I know many more people who've been hurt by glass in the water. Damned beer bottles... bloody drunks could at least keep their broken stubbies out of the water!!
between the worlds most poisonous snakes spiders, and jelly fish not to mention croks ,how do y'all make it on a daily basis?
Oh, it's a hard job robert, let me tell you... but someone's got to do it...
Waking up in the morning and seeing things like this make it a bit easier though...
Nice pics Pho3nix! Love them!
My Aussie sister n law fears the water because of living over there. The first time I took her to a beach here in the US, she was having nothing to do with it. She would tell me stories of the crocs in the waves. She would shake when down by the beach at my house, it really showed me that there is some real mean crocs in Australia. She has never been in the water here and I doubt she ever will because of her fear. She grew up in the sticks in a tent....I have heard many of her stories that just leave me speechless.
Sunny, you're so lucky to have someone who can relate these stories to you. These peoples are a wonderful mob... wise, moral, noble and amazingly good friends to have.
Their stories and their mother (the earth) are their riches... kind of like a religion but much much more. As I said, you're very lucky.
Many locals have the same fear of the water Sunny... and rightly so. It seems to be mostly the non-indiginous aussies (read: white fellas) who do really well at water sports. But then, that fear is based on observations that have been passed down through the generations for the last 50 000 or so years. The aboriginals in Far North Queensland know that you don't go swimming in the sea in the summer months because you will get sick and die... these are the months that the irukandji jellyfish arrive around our shores. Some tribal people won't go in any water at all... presumably unless it's in a bath tub. When you get water this brown (which is normal), it's no surprise.