Hello & welcome @arithmetic!
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see - you learn every day.
Thank you @Outdated
I love it when you post that picture. Reminds me there are idiots the world round.This is a picture of Brutus, a large croc popular with tourists on the Adelaide River in the top end. If he grabbed a human around the middle I don't fancy their chances.
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Did you receive a thank-you card from the crocks? lolMany years ago a couple of young German girls asked me about camping sites around Kunnanurra. I described a spot to them almost in the town on the banks of the Ord River, a beautiful spot, but I warned them not to swim there because of the crocs. One of the girls said "Don't be silly, they just put those signs up for the tourists.".
"Oh, alright then. Enjoy your trip.". There's no point trying to explain anything to some people.
They may be dumb, but damned brave.This is a picture of Brutus, a large croc popular with tourists on the Adelaide River in the top end. If he grabbed a human around the middle I don't fancy their chances.
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Running on hind legs... lolCrocodiles...
Someone consulted me on the bus one day... "Ask the old fellah"
So this beautiful young European woman explains to me that if a crocodile comes she will just "poke it in the eye"... question mark.
Comments, anyone?
I said to her that I have an ambition - I never want to meet a crocodile in the wild.
I explained that these 3 or 4 meter creatures weigh perhaps half a ton.
I explained that they get up on their hind legs and run at you with their half meter jaws open, making as much as 40km/hour.
I think she might almost have wet herself.
Good.
Job done.
Life saved!
"Misery loves company."One thing that I've already learnt here is that I'm not alone.
Another thing I now have that I didn't have last week is an explanation of why things went so wrong. Wooh that's been a long time coming and a lot of pain.
But the best thing is that I now feel much more hope. It's been a big help for me to get this new understanding of myself, and to find others at least somewhat like me.
Thanks people (Y)
Don’t quote me on this because it’s been a few years, but I think it was Laura, out west from Cooktown, that was without a publican for quite a while, at least the pub was closed when I went through. The previous publican was a local, who reckoned he knew which way was up and, against all advice to the contrary, went fishing at the same spot on, it would’ve been the Kennedy River, the same arvo every weekend. They never did find him but the general wisdom was that an old man croc had watched him for months, always coming to the same spot at the same time. One weekend, he met him. So it’s not just the tourists who think they know better. Silly galah!Many years ago a couple of young German girls asked me about camping sites around Kunnanurra. I described a spot to them almost in the town on the banks of the Ord River, a beautiful spot, but I warned them not to swim there because of the crocs. One of the girls said "Don't be silly, they just put those signs up for the tourists.".
"Oh, alright then. Enjoy your trip.". There's no point trying to explain anything to some people.
There's publicans and then there's publicans.Don’t quote me on this because it’s been a few years, but I think it was Laura, out west from Cooktown, that was without a publican for quite a while....
There is a concept that I believe to be a good for the humanity at philosophical and practical level even thought it is a grim and insensitive way to put it... The concept is The Darwin Awards.I warned them not to swim there because of the crocs. One of the girls said "Don't be silly, they just put those signs up for the tourists.".
I explained that they get up on their hind legs and run at you with their half meter jaws open, making as much as 40km/hour.