Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin has passed away


He was one crazy Aussie ......and a great guy too.

I was really stunned when I heard this news.
 
I imagine video footage of his death will make its way online. I guess it's inevitable that a man like that is killed by an animal. Does anyone remember his FedEx commercial? He gets bitten by a snake and expects to be saved, but the anti-venom was not shipped by FedEx and Steve goes down...

I can think of a whole slew of celebrities that I'd rather see get stabbed by a stingray instead of Steve.
 
Steve was a good man... and I can't imagine a person who was as brave or who was more into nature than him.
 
I highly doubt that the footage will make its way to the internet anytime soon. We know what happened and as interesting as it may seem to see the footage I think respect should be shown.

The stingray is a defensive animal. It eats shrimp and other crustracions, but it doesn't really like to attack other animals unless it feels threatened. The stinray by LUCK must've hit his heart and/or close to is. The poison itself in that area of the body will cause complications if not death. He was able to pull the stinger out, but it was to late. He died immediately after that while he went into cardiac arrest.

It is very sad to see someone like that leave. He had very good intentions and educated so many. His personality was viewed as 'crazy' but that was just the way he was. I am sure he taught so many childeren so many new things that they would have never learned if it wasn't for him.

I feel really bad but I must say that it is interesting how he died. It seems as though nature was going to have the last laugh since he was cheating death and laughing all the time. Funny how a stingray, an animal that is not as dangerous as a croc or great white was his final opponent.

RIP Steve and may your teachings help those who need it the most. I hope that Animal Planet establishes a fund in his name to help educate people around the world.

My condolences to his family.

R.I.P Stave Irwin
 
The footage may yet appear on TV.

http://www.contactmusic.com/news.nsf/article/crocodile hunter death to be broadcast_1007314

The footage of late Australian naturalist STEVE IRWIN being killed by a stingray could be shown on TV. Charismatic Irwin, dubbed the Crocodile Hunter after his internationally acclaimed TV show, died yesterday (04SEP06) while diving on Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Irwin was filming for a new documentary when he lost his life, and his cameraman shot the moment when the stingray's barbed tail stabbed the legendary conservationist through the heart. The tapes are currently being held by Queensland police - but Irwin's family are determined to respect his last wishes and allow the harrowing footage to be broadcast. Irwin once insisted, "My number one rule is to keep that camera rolling. Even if it's shaky or slightly out of focus, I don't give a rip. "Even if a big old alligator is chewing me up I want to go down and go, 'Crikey!' just before I die. That would be the ultimate for me." An insider tells British newspaper the Daily Star, "This is exactly what Steve would have wanted. He knew the dangers and was totally up for the cameras to get everything."
 
Well, then, I suppose that in this case, 'respect' would be to make it available for people to see, as strange as it may seem to some of us.

Perhaps it wasn't irony - maybe, in the grand scheme, he'll have more of an impact in death than he might have in life.
 
Snake Vargas said:
Well, then, I suppose that in this case, 'respect' would be to make it available for people to see, as strange as it may seem to some of us.

Very true. Well, I guess we will eventually see this once it surfaces on the internet.

Snake Vargas said:
Perhaps it wasn't irony - maybe, in the grand scheme, he'll have more of an impact in death than he might have in life.


That is very true. JFK, Che, and others like come to mind in dying so young yet having more of an impact after death.
 
I don't look forward to seeing a Steve Irwin snuff film. On the other hand, I'm not sure if Steve himself would take umbrage to folks watching him die at the hands of a stingray, so long as he was the subject of curiosity and not ridicule. In fact, I'm almost certain that if he could speak to us through the great beyond, he'd dub-over the remainder of the episode and discribe in enthusiastic detail what powerful damage a well-placed stingray barb can do to the human body.

Tragic as this is, I also don't think Steve would have had it any other way. He devoted his professional life to sharing his unbridled passion for nature, and he left us doing just the same.

We're in your debt Steve. You've given us intense memories and shown us amazing things.
 
There are many website already up in reference to Steve's passing.

There is talk that Discovery will start a fund in his name and they are going to begin airing episodes of the Croc Hunter this whole week.

I am truly saddened by his sudden death.
 
Obviously not everybody feels so bad, the legendary Australian-born feminist writer Germaine Greer seems to be in no mood to "share the love". :D

'That sort of self-delusion is what it takes to be a real Aussie larrikin'

Germaine Greer
Tuesday September 5, 2006
The Guardian

The world mourns. World-famous wildlife warrior Steve Irwin has died a hero, doing the thing he loved, filming a sequence for a new TV series. He was supposed to have been making a new documentary to have been called Ocean's Deadliest, but, when filming was held up by bad weather, he decided to "go off and shoot a few segments" for his eight-year-old daughter's upcoming TV series, "just stuff on the reef and little animals". His manager John Stainton "just said fine, anything that would keep him moving and keep his adrenaline going". Evidently it's Stainton's job to keep Irwin pumped larger than life, shouting "Crikey!" and punching the air.
Irwin was the real Crocodile Dundee, a great Australian, an ambassador for wildlife, a global phenomenon, a superhuman generator of merchandise, books, interactive video-games and action figures. The only creatures he couldn't dominate were parrots. A parrot once did its best to rip his nose off his face. Parrots are a lot smarter than crocodiles.
What seems to have happened on Batt Reef is that Irwin and a cameraman went off in a little dinghy to see what they could find. What they found were stingrays. You can just imagine Irwin yelling: "Just look at these beauties! Crikey! With those barbs a stingray can kill a horse!" (Yes, Steve, but a stingray doesn't want to kill a horse. It eats crustaceans, for God's sake.) All Australian children know about stingrays. We are now being told that only three people have ever been killed by Australian stingrays. One of them must have been the chap who bought it 60 years ago in Brighton Baths where my school used to go on swimming days. Port Philip Bay was famous for stingrays, which are fine as long as you can see them, but they do what most Dasyatidae do, which is bury themselves in the sand or mud with only their eyes sticking out. What you don't want to do with a stingray is stand on it. The lashing response of the tail is automatic; the barb is coated with a bacterial slime as deadly as rotten oyster toxin.

As a Melbourne boy, Irwin should have had a healthy respect for stingrays, which are actually commoner, and bigger, in southern waters than they are near Port Douglas, where he was killed. The film-makers maintain that the ray that took Irwin out was a "bull ray", or Dasyatis brevicaudata, but this is not usually found as far north as Port Douglas. Marine biologist Dr Meredith Peach has been quoted as saying, "It's really quite unusual for divers to be stung unless they are grappling with the animal and, knowing Steve Irwin, perhaps that may have been the case." Not much sympathy there then.

The only time Irwin ever seemed less than entirely lovable to his fans (as distinct from zoologists) was when he went into the Australia Zoo crocodile enclosure with his month-old baby son in one hand and a dead chicken in the other. For a second you didn't know which one he meant to feed to the crocodile. If the crocodile had been less depressed it might have made the decision for him. As the catatonic beast obediently downed its tiny snack, Irwin walked his baby on the grass, not something that paediatricians recommend for rubbery baby legs even when there isn't a stir-crazy carnivore a few feet away. The adoring world was momentarily appalled. They called it child abuse. The whole spectacle was revolting. The crocodile would rather have been anywhere else and the chicken had had a grim life too, but that's entertainment at Australia Zoo.

Irwin's response to the sudden outburst of criticism was bizarre. He believed that he had the crocodile under control. But he could have fallen over, suggested an interviewer. He admitted that was possible, but only if a meteor had hit the earth and caused an earthquake of 6.6 on the Richter scale. That sort of self-delusion is what it takes to be a "real Aussie larrikin".

What Irwin never seemed to understand was that animals need space. The one lesson any conservationist must labour to drive home is that habitat loss is the principal cause of species loss. There was no habitat, no matter how fragile or finely balanced, that Irwin hesitated to barge into, trumpeting his wonder and amazement to the skies. There was not an animal he was not prepared to manhandle. Every creature he brandished at the camera was in distress. Every snake badgered by Irwin was at a huge disadvantage, with only a single possible reaction to its terrifying situation, which was to strike. Easy enough to avoid, if you know what's coming. Even my cat knew that much. Those of us who live with snakes, as I do with no fewer than 12 front-fanged venomous snake species in my bit of Queensland rainforest, know that they will get out of our way if we leave them a choice. Some snakes are described as aggressive, but, if you're a snake, unprovoked aggression doesn't make sense. Snakes on a plane only want to get off. But Irwin was an entertainer, a 21st-century version of a lion-tamer, with crocodiles instead of lions.

In 2004, Irwin was accused of illegally encroaching on the space of penguins, seals and humpback whales in Antarctica, where he was filming a documentary called Ice Breaker. An investigation by the Australian Environmental Department resulted in no action being taken, which is not surprising seeing that John Howard, the prime minister, made sure that Irwin was one of the guests invited to a "gala barbecue" for George Bush a few months before. Howard is now Irwin's chief mourner, which is only fair, seeing that Irwin announced that Howard is the greatest leader the world has ever seen.

The animal world has finally taken its revenge on Irwin, but probably not before a whole generation of kids in shorts seven sizes too small has learned to shout in the ears of animals with hearing 10 times more acute than theirs, determined to become millionaire animal-loving zoo-owners in their turn.


What can I say .......a bit bitchy I think.

"There was no habitat, no matter how fragile or finely balanced, that Irwin hesitated to barge into, trumpeting his wonder and amazement to the skies. There was not an animal he was not prepared to manhandle. Every creature he brandished at the camera was in distress. Every snake badgered by Irwin was at a huge disadvantage, with only a single possible reaction to its terrifying situation, which was to strike."

"a whole generation of kids in shorts seven sizes too small has learned to shout in the ears of animals with hearing 10 times more acute than theirs"
 
LOL Feminist ****.. they often tend to live a life where they always complain.. so why not this time..
enjoy your self bitches:D
 
Germaine Greer the old bitch from the 1970s. She is probably the most famous female extremist in Australian History. If she had her way during the 70s feminine movemnt,the entire male population would have been chained up and be slaves. She hates men, and she is using this opportunity to get some attention for herself and prove her point to anyone who cares. Enough of this old geezer, RIP Steve Irwin, true aussie legend.
 

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