Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter, Is Dead

  • #341
It was very sad watching John Stainton on Larry King.I was touched more than I can say.My heart really hurt while watching this man speak of his great friend Steve.
I have not seen so much pure emotion coming from someone as I saw from John.


I took the advise of Liz and had plenty of Kleenex close to me......


I wept.




Respectfully,
dark_shadows
 
  • #342
It was so very touching, dark! I have seen the clips of John Stainton replayed on Headline News and the News Magazine Shows (Like ET, Inside Edition) and each and every time his raw emotion just pierces my heart.

I wonder how Steve's long time mate, Wes, is holding up. I recall seeing old footage of Steve saying he would die for Wes. They've been friends since they were teens.

Then of course, there's Terri and their babies ... gee, that's a whole 'nother box of kleenex. :(
I just can't even bear to go there, yet.

Just continue praying for them all ...
 
  • #343
Liz said:
Hi dingo, and thanks for posting as to the official word regarding the funeral.

It saddens me somewhat that the family declined the offer of a public state funeral. If anyone, Steve seemed so deserving, after everything he has contributed. But if that is what Steve would have wanted, as an 'ordinary bloke', I honor that decision.

I personally don't see anything 'ordinary' about Steve but I understand what his dad was saying. If anything, I felt Steve to be an exceptionally extraordinary individual!

I hope it's not for fear of the likes of that Ms. Greer using a state funeral as cannon fodder. I don't like posting ugly stuff about others on a public forum; but from here on out, I do hope Ms. Greer is able to refrain from her acidic remarks and stuffs a sock in it!

Otherwise we may have to have Agro invite her to the Australia Zoo for lunch ... :croc:

;) j/k, of course :o
hi Liz......I thought from the start that Steve wouldnt have a state funeral...too much fanfare for his likings...as for the Ms Greer...she would make great croc bait mate:croc:
 
  • #344
Indy Gal said:
HOW CAN YOU COMPARE THE TWO??? STEVE IRWIN IS A LEGAND AND I WILL MISS HIM. TERRI, BINDI, AND BOB YOU WILL BE IN MY PRAYERS.
Indy Gal said:
PLEASE STOP TALKING ILL OF THE DEAD. I AM SORRY BUT IMO IT IS VERY RUDE. ANIMAL LOVERS ALL OVER THE WORLD RESPECTED EVERYTHING THAT MAN DID. I AM ONE.
Indy Gal,
Please read a thread before posting.You posted these remarks to Scandi after there was a post asking for the posts to be retracted.Also there is no need for using all caps.(shouting)
Scandi requested the threads to be removed.They have not been removed yet.
If you would have read back,you would have seen this;

Scandi said:
Hi BeeBee and posters here,

I PM'ed Texas 1, our Mod for this thread, and asked her to please delete my post #5 as I could no longer do that.

I told her I always thought Steve made a mistake, but in retrospect I have realized posting this thought on the thread regarding his tragic death, was in poor taste for me to mention here. This is where everyone is coming together to remember all the good things he did in his life, and there are so many positive things about Steve and his life that are important and will always live on.

Thanks, Scandi


I posted that I agreed with Scandi.So I was as guilty.But I did change my mind and requested a retraction.
To belittle someone without reading all posts prior to posting is disrespectful.
I am offended by your posts.
dark_shadows
 
  • #345
narlacat said:
She certainly has Dingo, 'eff her :eek:
My words exactly Narla:o
 
  • #346
dark_shadows said:
Hi Scandi,:)
I responded to your #8 post stating that I agreed with you.It has a quote to your post.My post is #61.
I would like this removed also.I sat and watched Animal Planet on monday and I watched the part where he explained the part with his son and the croc.When that incident took place the media was all over it.I regret to say that I listened to their side.It was not until I watched Steve explain in his own words and emotion what really happened.Even though that interview was dated 20june2004,I did not see it until monday.(I watched it more than once.)
I am happy that you want to have your post removed,because while I was watching him explain,I felt guilty thinking that he put his son in danger.
I am going to PM Texas and ask for the post to be removed.
Respectfully,
dark_shadows
Dark shadows...I just need to say how highly I think of you..not just on this thread but through out the whole forum.I am pleased to be able to interact with somebody such as you:blowkiss: .
 
  • #347
dingo said:
Dark shadows...I just need to say how highly I think of you..not just on this thread but through out the whole forum.I am pleased to be able to interact with somebody such as you:blowkiss: .
Dingo,:)
I am truly honored by your post.
I have always had the upmost respect for you,and I always will.i want you to know how much your heartfelt post means to me.I am also pleased to be in the company of someone like you.
Thank-you so much for the words of your heart.:blowkiss:
All of my Respect to you Dingo.
dark_shadows


P.S.
I was just about ready to update the Bali thread when I saw your post.....
 
  • #348
Just heard, there will be a private furneral in the next few days.


7:38pm: STEVE Irwin's family has said a public service will be held in response to the overwhelming sympathy and support his shock death has sparked, as they formally rejected a state funeral
Fronting the media for the second time in as many days outside Australia Zoo on Queensland's Sunshine Coast, Irwin's father Robert said the service would be held within the next two weeks.


http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,20369696-2,00.html


I still can't believe he's gone........pout
:angel: :(
 
  • #349
Irwin's Family Talks Publicly About His Tragic Death

Sept. 6, 2006 —*As thousands of mourners make their way to Australia's sunshine coast to pay respects to their beloved "Crocodile Hunter," Steve Irwin, some observers predict his children will carry on their father's legacy.

--> continued at link:
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=2399567&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312
 
  • #350
Pharlap said:
Just heard, there will be a private furneral in the next few days.


7:38pm: STEVE Irwin's family has said a public service will be held in response to the overwhelming sympathy and support his shock death has sparked, as they formally rejected a state funeral
Fronting the media for the second time in as many days outside Australia Zoo on Queensland's Sunshine Coast, Irwin's father Robert said the service would be held within the next two weeks.


http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,20369696-2,00.html


I still can't believe he's gone........pout
:angel: :(

I was thinking today that it would be so nice if they would bury him somewhere on the grounds of the Australia Zoo, make a very special place for him...a place where his fans could visit, and he'd be close to his beloved animals.
 
  • #351
englishleigh said:
I was thinking today that it would be so nice if they would bury him somewhere on the grounds of the Australia Zoo, make a very special place for him...a place where his fans could visit, and he'd be close to his beloved animals.
Great idea!! :angel:
You know I bet your right....
 
  • #352
From the story at post # 352:
Fans of the Australian conservationist have also been urged to wear his signature khaki colour tomorrow as part of what a chain email has dubbed "International Khaki Day".

Great idea! Wear khaki tomorrow Sept. 8. Pass it on!
 
  • #353
Pharlap, thanks for the link. There's a great pic of Steve and Bob with a koala there. Isn't Bob an adorable lil boy?!

I guess its only fair that I mention that Bindi is just a doll, personality and looks! A real lil beau-dee, allright.

Thinking about them and praying for them.
 
  • #354
I always thought that Bindi looks like her daddy and Bob like Terri. Such a sweet family.
I can't believe this has happened. :(
 
  • #355
My sister, who is the hospital manager at a large zoo in TX sent me the following email: This is the opinion of most of us who work with animals and respect them – finally someone has said it out loud so to speak.


NOW YOU know why Aussie crocodile aficionado Steve Irwin called the new TV show he was working on "The Ocean's Deadliest." After years of poking his boyish face and trademark safari shirt, khaki shorts and hiking boots in front of dangerous animals, Irwin likely would have found some small satisfaction in a deadly animal -- a stingray with a fatal barb -- living up to his PR. Crikey.

With Irwin gone, the world will see a little less swagger. Irwin's enthusiasm was infectious and his love for animals was apparent. You have to admire a man who, trained as a diesel mechanic, parlayed his passion for reptiles into worldwide fame and fortune. Now he leaves behind a wife and two young children, as well as an admirable legacy of donating millions to wildlife conservation.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard called Irwin's death "a huge loss to Australia" and offered to hold a state funeral -- which Irwin's family humbly declined. (Be it noted that Irwin had once called Howard "the greatest leader Australia has ever had.")

Many Australians, however, could not stand Irwin. As ex-patriot Germaine Greer wrote in the Guardian, "The animal world has finally taken its revenge on Irwin."

(I first learned about Irwin in 2001, when the guide who took me through Australia's rain forest complained bitterly about the croc-hunting showboat. In the rain forest, the biggest crocodile we saw was about a foot long. Later, when pointing to a lizard, the guide quipped, "You can tell your friends that in Australia you saw a lizard the size of a crocodile.")

Irwin's other legacy is that he has passed onto the world's children the fanciful notion that nature is a theme park. He failed to respect the lethal side of his co-star creatures. "I don't want to seem arrogant or big-headed," Irwin once told the Washington Post's Paul Farhi, "but I have a real instinct with animals. I've grown up with them .. It's like I have an uncanny supernatural force rattling around my body. I tell you what, mate; it's magnetism."

No, mate, it's delusion. The real surprise is that a crocodile hadn't finished off Irwin sooner -- just as a bear mauled to death Grizzly People co-founder Timothy Treadwell and his girlfriend Amie Huguenard in Alaska three years ago.

When human beings mistake wildlife for Walt Disney characters, they fail to appreciate wild animals for what they truly are -- wild. Read: Not susceptible to boyish charm.

Add: Hungry and fearful.

When they are injured, they die. When they can't eat, they die. When they are afraid, they attack. Given their druthers, they'd rather not be around human beings.

That is why the proper way to view wildlife is not in a close shot next to Irwin's round face, but through a long lens, where they can be seen living in their own habitat. A crocodile is a wonder to behold because it is a crocodile, not because it snaps at Irwin's boot.

Or toward his son. In 2004, Irwin fed a 13-foot crocodile a dead chicken as he cradled his son, Robert, then 1-month-old, in the other arm. Australian cameras aired the feeding; public outrage followed. Afterward, Irwin told reporters, "I was in complete control."

Scary.

Also in 2004, Australia's Department of Environment and Heritage investigated and cleared Irwin of the charge that he got too close to penguins, whales and seals in Antarctica. Legal issues aside, Irwin changed how television airs wildlife shows. Now, animals aren't entertaining unless there's a comic face mugging next to them.

As Wild Kingdom's Jim Fowler told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Tuesday, when his show first aired, "people were just content with seeing the animal. Now they want, you know, confrontation with the animal. They want adventure. They want excitement. The technology and the little cameras get right in their mouth. So this stuff is going to continue to happen. It's going to get worse, I believe."

Irwin did not deserve to die -- but his death can hardly be considered a surprise. It was the predictable end that followed the marriage of a dangerous hobby with a dangerous conceit -- and better Irwin than the baby.

Debra J. Saunders

 
  • #356
I saw a cartoon in the paper yesterday I will try and describe. It had 4 crocs in a pond in a circle.They were staring at the water in front of them. The caption said Crikey We miss him already. I chuckled and thought. How many of us feel the same way.
 
  • #357
Steves Poem
The hunter had to leave us, he won't travel on our shores.
At that, the largest in the pack let out a sad, long, roar.........
The koalas had a teardrop, the dingos had some too.......the Croc's
stood at attention, as the Aussies knew they would.
The animals got silent...the jungle became still....Some leaves bent down to
touch the ground, and the flowers turned to wilt.
For the man they loved "downunder," has left his land of birth. But his heart and soul, and wisdom......remain right here on Earth.
And as the night stars came aglow the world shed many tears.
But......a whisper could be heard nearby, that rang into our ears.
"By Crikey Mates, Good Day, Good Night......"
I had to say "goodbye" .......
But, "hold my children and my wife and please don't let them cry."
And as he turned and walked away..... we felt the whole earth pray......
And in our hearts we know that.... we will meet again oneday.

****************************************Sundayrain*********
For our Aussie friends and those who love and admire Steve Irwin
We honor him too.............
The best I could do in a hurry....to let you know......we are sad too!!
 
  • #358
Sundayrain said:
Steves Poem
The hunter had to leave us, he won't travel on our shores.
At that, the largest in the pack let out a sad, long, roar.........
The koalas had a teardrop, the dingos had some too.......the Croc's
stood at attention, as the Aussies knew they would.
The animals got silent...the jungle became still....Some leaves bent down to
touch the ground, and the flowers turned to wilt.
For the man they loved "downunder," has left his land of birth. But his heart and soul, and wisdom......remain right here on Earth.
And as the night stars came aglow the world shed many tears.
But......a whisper could be heard nearby, that rang into our ears.
"By Crikey Mates, Good Day, Good Night......"
I had to say "goodbye" .......
But, "hold my children and my wife and please don't let them cry."
And as he turned and walked away..... we felt the whole earth pray......
And in our hearts we know that.... we will meet again oneday.

****************************************Sundayrain*********
For our Aussie friends and those who love and admire Steve Irwin
We honor him too.............
The best I could do in a hurry....to let you know......we are sad too!!
That is beautiful...thankyou Sundayrain
 
  • #359
christine2448 said:
My sister, who is the hospital manager at a large zoo in TX sent me the following email: This is the opinion of most of us who work with animals and respect them – finally someone has said it out loud so to speak.


NOW YOU know why Aussie crocodile aficionado Steve Irwin called the new TV show he was working on "The Ocean's Deadliest." After years of poking his boyish face and trademark safari shirt, khaki shorts and hiking boots in front of dangerous animals, Irwin likely would have found some small satisfaction in a deadly animal -- a stingray with a fatal barb -- living up to his PR. Crikey.

With Irwin gone, the world will see a little less swagger. Irwin's enthusiasm was infectious and his love for animals was apparent. You have to admire a man who, trained as a diesel mechanic, parlayed his passion for reptiles into worldwide fame and fortune. Now he leaves behind a wife and two young children, as well as an admirable legacy of donating millions to wildlife conservation.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard called Irwin's death "a huge loss to Australia" and offered to hold a state funeral -- which Irwin's family humbly declined. (Be it noted that Irwin had once called Howard "the greatest leader Australia has ever had.")

Many Australians, however, could not stand Irwin. As ex-patriot Germaine Greer wrote in the Guardian, "The animal world has finally taken its revenge on Irwin."

(I first learned about Irwin in 2001, when the guide who took me through Australia's rain forest complained bitterly about the croc-hunting showboat. In the rain forest, the biggest crocodile we saw was about a foot long. Later, when pointing to a lizard, the guide quipped, "You can tell your friends that in Australia you saw a lizard the size of a crocodile.")

Irwin's other legacy is that he has passed onto the world's children the fanciful notion that nature is a theme park. He failed to respect the lethal side of his co-star creatures. "I don't want to seem arrogant or big-headed," Irwin once told the Washington Post's Paul Farhi, "but I have a real instinct with animals. I've grown up with them .. It's like I have an uncanny supernatural force rattling around my body. I tell you what, mate; it's magnetism."

No, mate, it's delusion. The real surprise is that a crocodile hadn't finished off Irwin sooner -- just as a bear mauled to death Grizzly People co-founder Timothy Treadwell and his girlfriend Amie Huguenard in Alaska three years ago.

When human beings mistake wildlife for Walt Disney characters, they fail to appreciate wild animals for what they truly are -- wild. Read: Not susceptible to boyish charm.

Add: Hungry and fearful.

When they are injured, they die. When they can't eat, they die. When they are afraid, they attack. Given their druthers, they'd rather not be around human beings.

That is why the proper way to view wildlife is not in a close shot next to Irwin's round face, but through a long lens, where they can be seen living in their own habitat. A crocodile is a wonder to behold because it is a crocodile, not because it snaps at Irwin's boot.

Or toward his son. In 2004, Irwin fed a 13-foot crocodile a dead chicken as he cradled his son, Robert, then 1-month-old, in the other arm. Australian cameras aired the feeding; public outrage followed. Afterward, Irwin told reporters, "I was in complete control."

Scary.

Also in 2004, Australia's Department of Environment and Heritage investigated and cleared Irwin of the charge that he got too close to penguins, whales and seals in Antarctica. Legal issues aside, Irwin changed how television airs wildlife shows. Now, animals aren't entertaining unless there's a comic face mugging next to them.

As Wild Kingdom's Jim Fowler told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Tuesday, when his show first aired, "people were just content with seeing the animal. Now they want, you know, confrontation with the animal. They want adventure. They want excitement. The technology and the little cameras get right in their mouth. So this stuff is going to continue to happen. It's going to get worse, I believe."

Irwin did not deserve to die -- but his death can hardly be considered a surprise. It was the predictable end that followed the marriage of a dangerous hobby with a dangerous conceit -- and better Irwin than the baby.

Debra J. Saunders



Sorry...this email/opinion is rude and frankly it sucks. :snooty: A man is dead...his family is grieving, and there's no place for stuff like this.
 
  • #360
christine2448 said:
My sister, who is the hospital manager at a large zoo in TX sent me the following email: This is the opinion of most of us who work with animals and respect them – finally someone has said it out loud so to speak.


NOW YOU know why Aussie crocodile aficionado Steve Irwin called the new TV show he was working on "The Ocean's Deadliest." After years of poking his boyish face and trademark safari shirt, khaki shorts and hiking boots in front of dangerous animals, Irwin likely would have found some small satisfaction in a deadly animal -- a stingray with a fatal barb -- living up to his PR. Crikey.

With Irwin gone, the world will see a little less swagger. Irwin's enthusiasm was infectious and his love for animals was apparent. You have to admire a man who, trained as a diesel mechanic, parlayed his passion for reptiles into worldwide fame and fortune. Now he leaves behind a wife and two young children, as well as an admirable legacy of donating millions to wildlife conservation.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard called Irwin's death "a huge loss to Australia" and offered to hold a state funeral -- which Irwin's family humbly declined. (Be it noted that Irwin had once called Howard "the greatest leader Australia has ever had.")

Many Australians, however, could not stand Irwin. As ex-patriot Germaine Greer wrote in the Guardian, "The animal world has finally taken its revenge on Irwin."

(I first learned about Irwin in 2001, when the guide who took me through Australia's rain forest complained bitterly about the croc-hunting showboat. In the rain forest, the biggest crocodile we saw was about a foot long. Later, when pointing to a lizard, the guide quipped, "You can tell your friends that in Australia you saw a lizard the size of a crocodile.")

Irwin's other legacy is that he has passed onto the world's children the fanciful notion that nature is a theme park. He failed to respect the lethal side of his co-star creatures. "I don't want to seem arrogant or big-headed," Irwin once told the Washington Post's Paul Farhi, "but I have a real instinct with animals. I've grown up with them .. It's like I have an uncanny supernatural force rattling around my body. I tell you what, mate; it's magnetism."

No, mate, it's delusion. The real surprise is that a crocodile hadn't finished off Irwin sooner -- just as a bear mauled to death Grizzly People co-founder Timothy Treadwell and his girlfriend Amie Huguenard in Alaska three years ago.

When human beings mistake wildlife for Walt Disney characters, they fail to appreciate wild animals for what they truly are -- wild. Read: Not susceptible to boyish charm.

Add: Hungry and fearful.

When they are injured, they die. When they can't eat, they die. When they are afraid, they attack. Given their druthers, they'd rather not be around human beings.

That is why the proper way to view wildlife is not in a close shot next to Irwin's round face, but through a long lens, where they can be seen living in their own habitat. A crocodile is a wonder to behold because it is a crocodile, not because it snaps at Irwin's boot.

Or toward his son. In 2004, Irwin fed a 13-foot crocodile a dead chicken as he cradled his son, Robert, then 1-month-old, in the other arm. Australian cameras aired the feeding; public outrage followed. Afterward, Irwin told reporters, "I was in complete control."

Scary.

Also in 2004, Australia's Department of Environment and Heritage investigated and cleared Irwin of the charge that he got too close to penguins, whales and seals in Antarctica. Legal issues aside, Irwin changed how television airs wildlife shows. Now, animals aren't entertaining unless there's a comic face mugging next to them.

As Wild Kingdom's Jim Fowler told Fox News' Bill O'Reilly Tuesday, when his show first aired, "people were just content with seeing the animal. Now they want, you know, confrontation with the animal. They want adventure. They want excitement. The technology and the little cameras get right in their mouth. So this stuff is going to continue to happen. It's going to get worse, I believe."

Irwin did not deserve to die -- but his death can hardly be considered a surprise. It was the predictable end that followed the marriage of a dangerous hobby with a dangerous conceit -- and better Irwin than the baby.

Debra J. Saunders

Sorry, but I, for one, am surprised and that is all I'm going to say because I don't agree with this e-mail:silenced:
 

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