黑料社

Drunken hunter fights off Australian croc with an eye-poke

SYDNEY鈥擜 tipsy goose hunter said Saturday he lived to tell the tale of being attacked by a two-meter-long crocodile in northern Australia after poking the beast in the eye.

鈥淲e were shooting geese, my cousin-brother told me go and get the duck there,鈥 20-year-old Stephen Moreen told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

鈥淚 got the first goose. The second one鈥 the number three one, he grabbed me on my arm.

鈥淸The croc did] the death roll. Lucky for me when (we) went underwater I saw him and poked his eye.

鈥淗e let go. Once he let go he ran for the bank.

鈥淢y cousin-brother shot him.鈥

Moreen admitted he was 鈥渁 little bit tipsy鈥 and did not feel the pain when he was bitten on Friday evening near the remote community of Peppimenarti, 320 kilometers (195 miles) south-west of Darwin.

And he said he had some more beer while waiting for an ambulance to arrive.

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 too worried until I saw the scars,鈥 Moreen said. 鈥淚t made me cry.

鈥淚鈥檓 fine, I鈥檓 alive. It could have been bad. It could have got my leg. I was about waist deep (in water).

鈥淚 have a scratch on my back, the rest on my arm. He ripped out a bit of skin and left me with two to three holes.鈥

Crocodiles are common in the tropical north where numbers have increased since the introduction of protection laws in 1971, with government estimates putting the population at 75,000 to 100,000.

Last month the authorities shot a crocodile believed to have eaten a 57-year-old fisherman on the Adelaide River in the north.

Also in August a 22-year-old man disappeared near a beach in the Northern Territory鈥檚 Melville Island and was feared to have been taken by a crocodile.

In June, a crocodile snatched a man from his boat in the north鈥檚 Kakadu national park, while in January a 12-year-old boy was killed by a crocodile in the same park.

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