Croc Hunter, Steve Irwin, dead at 44

Hakunamatata

Le Meh
Premium Member
Very sad indeed. My son loves the Wiggles and one of his favorite Wiggle movies is the the one that was filmed at Australian Zoo.

Steve will be missed greatly....
 

pinkrose

Well-Known Member
:cry:
I was very saddened to read about this when I pulled up cnn.com. Steve was my son's hero. We have the videos, board game, movie, playsets, ect. lol He's learned a lot about animals through Steve.
Even though he doesn't watch the show as often now, I'm still finding it hard to tell him about Steves death.
 

erasure fan1

Well-Known Member
I became a huge Steve Irwin fan when I saw his first special on TV. This is so very sad. I dont think we will ever see someone like him again, he was truly a one of a kind and will be missed very much. The world of wildlife conservation lost an icon. My thoughts go out to his wife and 2 children.:(
 

Erika

Moderator
steve irwin always made me alugh and really got me intrested in snakes and crocs the man is a legend rip steve

That he is.



:(

My brother just called and now he feels guilty and sad about laughing at all those close calls over the years. I have a video of "Steve's Most Dangerous Adventures" and I agree that it'll probably be awhile before I can watch it like I used to.

We knew he wasn't invincible but a part of us hoped that maybe, just maybe...
 

mkt

Disney's Favorite Scumbag™
Premium Member
Original Poster
If anyone's interested, it looks like they're playing quite a bit of Steve Irwin tonight on Animal Planet
 

TwoTigersMom

Well-Known Member
Well that just stinks.

He was a great naturalist. I never really liked him as much as liked other TV naturalists like Jeff Corwin, but Steve was still a great herpatologist.

I wonder how the stingray managed to get his heart? That seems like a really awkward maneuver.

RIP Steve. You will be missed.

The article I read said he passed over a stingray burried in the sand and startled it. It sounded as if he didn't even know it was there. The article said the barb (that's about 10 inches long) entered under his rib cage and pierced his heart. It takes 14 sec, I believe (Mad?), to bleed out, so hopefully he never even felt pain or had time to realize what happened.

:cry:
I was very saddened to read about this when I pulled up cnn.com. Steve was my son's hero. We have the videos, board game, movie, playsets, ect. lol He's learned a lot about animals through Steve.
Even though he doesn't watch the show as often now, I'm still finding it hard to tell him about Steves death.

My son is the same way. We saw it on the news this morning and he started crying. He cried for almost an hour straight. When he stopped crying I told him to get dressed, that we were going to the store. He came back out of his room wearing khaki shorts, work boots, white socks and the Croc Hunter shirt I made him for Halloween last year! :cry: :cry: He's been teary eyed all day. For him and many others, I'm sure, it's like Spiderman or SUperman dying.
 

pinkrose

Well-Known Member
The article I read said he passed over a stingray burried in the sand and startled it. It sounded as if he didn't even know it was there. The article said the barb (that's about 10 inches long) entered under his rib cage and pierced his heart. It takes 14 sec, I believe (Mad?), to bleed out, so hopefully he never even felt pain or had time to realize what happened.



My son is the same way. We saw it on the news this morning and he started crying. He cried for almost an hour straight. When he stopped crying I told him to get dressed, that we were going to the store. He came back out of his room wearing khaki shorts, work boots, white socks and the Croc Hunter shirt I made him for Halloween last year! :cry: :cry: He's been teary eyed all day. For him and many others, I'm sure, it's like Spiderman or SUperman dying.

I finally told my son. He tried to act like it didn't bother him at first (you could tell it did in his eyes), but once he saw it on the news and went to turn on Animal Planet, then he started crying. He's very sad. It breaks my heart. :(

Here's an article I found....

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...12-601,00.html

Steve Irwin's freak death filmed
Ian Gerard and Tony Koch
September 05, 2006
FOOTAGE of Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin being fatally attacked by a stingray on the Great Barrier Reef has been handed to Queensland police as fans worldwide come to grips with the "freak" death.
Irwin, 44, was killed almost instantly when the stingray stabbed him in the heart with its poisonous 20cm barb as he snorkelled off Port Douglas, in north Queensland, yesterday morning.

His American-born wife, Terri, was trekking in Tasmania's Cradle Mountain and Lake St Clair National Park when the news broke of her husband's death and was last night being raced back to Queensland with her two children Bindi, 8, and Bob, 2.

"The footage shows him swimming in the water, the ray stopped and turned and that was it," said boatowner Peter West, who viewed the footage afterwards.

"There was no blood in the water, it was not that obvious ... something happened with this animal that made it rear and he was at the wrong position at the wrong time and if it hit him anywhere else we would not be talking about a fatality."

Irwin was shooting a documentary on dangerous marine life, in shallow water at Batt Reef, about 32 nautical miles offshore, at about 11am.

Tributes poured in from around the world for Irwin, a renowned environmentalist who was estimated to be earning more than $4million a year from his Queensland reptile park, Australia Zoo.

Footage of the attack shows Irwin swimming above a 2.5m stingray before it turns on him and sends a poisonous barb through his heart.

Irwin was pulled from the water by a cameraman and a crewman, put on an inflatable tender and taken to a support boat about 500m away.

Crewmembers say he was barely conscious in the minutes after the sting and died as his production team rushed him to his vessel, Croc One, and to a nearby island for emergency treatment.

A charter dive boat crew desperately tried to revive him on the beach, but were unsuccessful and he was pronounced dead shortly afterwards by Queensland Rescue Service officers, who had flown to the area by helicopter.

Irwin's body was last night flown to Cairns for a post-mortem examination as police seized all available evidence and interviewed witnesses in order to prepare a report for the Coroner.

A coronial inquest is expected.

Producer, director and life-long friend John Stainton yesterday said Irwin did not provoke the stingray and was simply swimming above it when he was attacked.

"He came over the top of a stingray and the stingray barb went up and into his chest and into his heart," Stainton said.

"It's likely that he possibly died instantly when the barb hit him, and I hope he felt no pain."

One of Irwin's contemporaries, internationally known cameraman and spearfisherman Ben Cropp, was in his own boat off Port Douglas when Irwin was killed.

"I have just spoken to a cameraman friend who was there and has seen the footage," Mr Cropp told The Australian last night.

"He was up in the shallow water, probably 1.5m to 2m deep, following a bull ray which was about a metre across the body - probably weighing about 100kg, and it had quite a large spine.

"The cameraman was filming in the water."

Mr Cropp said the stingray was spooked and went into defensive mood.

"It probably felt threatened because Steve was alongside and there was the cameraman ahead, and it felt there was danger and it baulked.

"It stopped and went into a defensive mode and swung its tail with the spike.

"Steve unfortunately was in a bad position and copped it.

"I have had that happen to me, and I can visualise it - when a ray goes into defensive, you get out of the way.

"Steve was so close he could not get away, so if you can imagine it - being right beside the ray and it swinging its spine upwards from underneath Steve - and it hit him.

"I have seen that sort of reaction with rays - with their tail breaking the water, such is the force."

Internationally renowned jellyfish sting expert Jamie Seymour was on board Irwin's boat at the time.

Irwin had decided yesterday morning to shoot a segment of film on stingrays for a new television program that will be hosted by his daughter, Bindi.

Surf Lifesavers national marine stinger adviser Lisa-Ann Gershwin said there had only been 17 fatal stingray attacks worldwide.

"I think it's just an extraordinary freak accident that has happened to his heart," she said.
"A lot of people will be afraid by this, but they need to keep in mind that this was a freak accident, it was a terrible tragedy but it is not common."

Dr Gershwin said stingray stings to the legs or arms were common and, while painful, were not normally considered dangerous. She said there were many different types of stingrays, with barbs on their tails up to 30cm long, and they poisoned victims with a range of toxins.

Mr West said the barb was like a "very rough knife" and while fatal stingray stings had been known to occur, filming and swimming alongside the animal was commonplace among marine filmmakers.

Mr Cropp said he was told that the strike was "close to the heart and Steve had a cardiac arrest".

"At first they treated him as being wounded, but he didn't survive unfortunately," he said.

"The second boat in attendance raced in to give assistance and they radioed for help.

"They went into Low Isle and met the chopper which took Steve's body out."

In September 2004, Mr Cropp was attacked by a tiger shark on Bott Reef. "The rays in Australia and particularly in the north are not like those on the Cayman Islands, which are very quiet and allow people to ride on their backs," he said.

"At this time of the year they are on the lookout for tiger sharks and are very frisky.

"They are not aggressive. In fact they are very timid, but they defend themselves by throwing their tail spine upwards, and there is a spike on the tip about eight inches long which they can use like a dagger."
 

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