• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Satanica

Veteran Member
You would think if I know some basic differences between alligators and crocs then tourist would have sense enough to do a little research about what they will encounter at their destination. If you ever get the chance, read "Eyelids of the Morning".
Picture5(13).png



"Someone is going to die," Leon Compton said, who is holidaying in the Top End with his family.

"A tourist is going to die at Cahills Crossing given the behaviour I saw yesterday at the crossing — it is only a matter of time."

Mr Compton, a presenter on ABC Radio in Hobart, said he was shocked to see so many tourists risking their lives near the dangerous reptiles, which congregate en masse near the notorious crossing.
Picture4(38).jpg

"This is a tourist phenomenon," he said, noting that people usually observe the crocs at a safe distance in a designated area away from the water's edge.

"I think normally there must be some sort of display or waiting point where people can actually [safely] stand on the bank, but it's being fixed at the moment."
[....]
"Saltwater crocodiles are dangerous animals and have attacked and killed people at Cahills Crossing. It is not safe to stand at the water's edge … visitors should never be complacent around crocodiles."

In 2017, a 47-year-old man was killed by a crocodile after trying to walk across the dangerous crossing on the East Alligator River.

A 40-year-old man was decapitated in the same location in 1987 by a large crocodile, while wading into waters to fish.

Despite official signs advising pedestrians that the crossing is closed, Mr Compton said he saw between 100 and 200 tourists walk down to the river "literally with their toes in the water".
[....]
Multiple crocodiles, including one as large as 4.5 metres, were very close to "people standing right on the edge … with bubbles emerging from the water below".

Mr Compton said children and vulnerable people were among the crowd.

"It was so ridiculous," he said.

"And literally crocs visible only metres away."

Mr Compton, who was viewing the crocodiles from a high boulder in a safe area, said a park ranger who saw what was going on warned people of the risks.

"[He said], 'I have lived here all my life and I am extremely nervous standing here right now — what you are doing here is absolute lunacy.'"

A new federally funded viewing platform at the crossing was first flagged in 2020, but construction did not begin until May this year, with completion expected by about September.

"We have closed the Cahills Crossing viewing platform and adjacent walking tracks until September while major construction work is underway on the new viewing platform," Mr Barclay said.


 
Seems to me to be a ready, affordable, self-sustaining source of food for the croci-gators.
Let the herd of stupid thin itself out. Don't bother with emergency response.
 
Pretty sure the whole island (and Tasmania too) has a death wish. They live in AUSTRALIA, where literally every damn thing has one goal, killing humans. These fools have it bad, real bad... :banghead:

And FFS, when niece number two was three she could rattle off the differences between alligators and crocodiles. She loved them both. And she loved watching them tear the crap out of their prey. It was hilarious. Her highest praise to anyone was "You a al-gator". Which was also hilarious. :joyful:
 
<<<Mr Compton said children and vulnerable people were among the crowd.

If adults want to play Croco Roulette with their lives that's entirely their choice but they have no right to bring children into a danger zone. For the crocs, it's just a FREE all you can eat buffet, delivered to their doorstep, offering big portions or bite-sized nuggets.
 
Back
Top