Steve Irwin (crocodile hunter) dies..........

Yeah really hits home hey? Hit us all yesterday with the fact that he died the day after Fathers's Day and that poor little girl is never going to forget that. Every year when her friends celebrate Father's Day she will remember that her Dad died the following day.:sad2:
 
Nutsy said:
Yeah really hits home hey? Hit us all yesterday with the fact that he died the day after Fathers's Day and that poor little girl is never going to forget that. Every year when her friends celebrate Father's Day she will remember that her Dad died the following day.:sad2:

It's a shame he wasn't able to spend his last father's day with his children. I think no matter what day it is they will always remember the day their daddy died. :(
 
I always stop to watch his show when flipping through the channels...i went to see his movie in the theaters since all the money went to charity...I feel that today is a sad day for everyone he was a good man.
 
For those who were wondering about the Zoo, if it would close or not.. the answer is it will not close.


I heard this morning that it will not be closing.. it was one of Steve's passions and it will most definatly reamain open.. they are even going ahead with the new animal hosptial which was to open next month. Steve would have wanted i no other way, the zoo to stay open and the new animal hospital to go ahead an open.
 

I just have not been able to get this off my mind all day. I barely could sleep last night and even had a dream that I flew to Australia and just sat in the zoo unable to do anything. I watched the shows on Animal Planet today and just cried watching his passion as he spoke not only of the animals...but of his family. The pure joy he had on his face when talking about his wife and children was just beautiful.

CNN mentioned that Animal Planet will be doing a tribute to him on Sunday. I am so bummed because that's the day we're flying out to WDW, so we won't be able to see it.
 
mking624 said:
I just have not been able to get this off my mind all day. I barely could sleep last night and even had a dream that I flew to Australia and just sat in the zoo unable to do anything. I watched the shows on Animal Planet today and just cried watching his passion as he spoke not only of the animals...but of his family. The pure joy he had on his face when talking about his wife and children was just beautiful.

CNN mentioned that Animal Planet will be doing a tribute to him on Sunday. I am so bummed because that's the day we're flying out to WDW, so we won't be able to see it.

Is there anyway you can record it? If not I'm sure it will be replayed.
 
Mom2Angels said:
Is there anyway you can record it? If not I'm sure it will be replayed.

You'd imagine so hey?
 
Mom2Angels said:
Is there anyway you can record it? If not I'm sure it will be replayed.
Our VCR is broken, so we can't record it...and my family doesn't have cable (plus they live 6 hours away from us, so it's not like they could just hop on over). I'm sure it will be replayed...but there's always that "what if they don't" fear, you know?
 
Irwin's body flown out
September 05, 2006 12:28pm


THE body of Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin has been flown to the Sunshine Coast from far north Queensland.

Irwin, 44, died after being stabbed in the chest by a stingray barb while snorkelling off Port Douglas, in far north Queensland, yesterday.

His casket was flown from Cairns and is due to arrive at a Sunshine Coast airport later this afternoon.

Close friend John Stainton, who was accompanying the body, said Irwin's funeral arrangements would be left to the family after Queensland Premier Peter Beattie offered a state funeral.

Mr Stainton said a state funeral would be a fitting tribute to Irwin's contributions to Queensland and Australia.

"I haven't thought about and I don't know how they would react to it but I feel that when you're in a public place like he was, that people do need to be able to share some closure," Mr Stainton said.

"I think it probably would be fitting but it's up to Terri."

Irwin leaves behind wife Terri and children Bindi, 8, and Bob, 2.
 
Irwin pulled barb out before death


Tuesday Sep 5 10:07 AEST
Fatally injured by a stingray, Steve Irwin pulled its barb out of his chest before losing consciousness, dramatic footage of his last moments reveals.

Friend John Stainton said the footage of the stingray attack which took the life of the Crocodile Hunter on the Great Barrier Reef was "shocking".

Mr Irwin, 44, died after the stingray barb punctured his chest while snorkelling off Port Douglas, in far north Queensland.

A cameraman captured the incident during filming for Irwin's new project with daughter Bindi, eight, that was to debut in the United States next year.

"I did see the footage and it's shocking," Mr Stainton told reporters in Cairns.
Mr Stainton, who was aboard Mr Irwin's vessel Croc One when the tragedy occurred, said it was likely the television star and naturalist died almost immediately as a result of the stingray's blow.

"(He was) probably a metre coming over the top of it," he said.

"He was underwater. I think, and the coroner's report will say what happened, but I think he died fairly instantly."

Mr Stainton said he was still in disbelief that a stingray could claim his close friend's life.

"He was always on the precipice," he said.

"He always pushed himself to the very limits but I thought he was invulnerable and I think he did too.

"I think we all had that belief that we'd pull through whatever situation we were in and he has been in some very close shaves with snakes and crocodiles.

"I would never imagine it to come from something like a stingray."

"It's a very hard thing to watch because you're actually witnessing somebody die ... and it's terrible."

Mr Stainton, also a producer and director of Irwin's popular television shows, said the footage showed Mr Irwin pulling the barb out of his chest before losing consciousness.

"It shows that Steve came over the top of the ray and the tail came up, and spiked him here (in the chest), and he pulled it out and the next minute he's gone.

"That was it. The cameraman had to shut down
 
Thanks Nutsy. I just saw this on the news. I never imagined the stingray barb to be that big. :sad2:
 
magicmouse2 said:
Thanks Nutsy. I just saw this on the news. I never imagined the stingray barb to be that big. :sad2:

Oh yeah.. they showed us a couple on tv and the one that got Steve was about 12 -18 inches long and filled with toxic slime.
 
I cannot read another page. All day i have just been laying on my couch so saddened, as if a member of my family had died.

Then tonight the animal planet did a bunch of memorance shows for him. In one he said that when he died "he wanted to be remembered for his love of life and enthusiasm".

omg i just sat in my bed and bawled like a baby.

I swear today when i told my 9 yr old about it, it felt like the time i told him his dog died. My son was very emotional about it and begged me to look for his crocodile movie (vhs, we dont have the player anymore) so now i need to buy the DVD for him.

Its just so unbearable sad. Poor Terri, his children and Dad. Just sooo sad :(
 
nurseypoo5 said:
I swear today when i told my 9 yr old about it, it felt like the time i told him his dog died. My son was very emotional about it and begged me to look for his crocodile movie (vhs, we dont have the player anymore) so now i need to buy the DVD for him.

My 9 year old DS took it pretty hard last night when he heard the news too. He was still up when it was breaking news last night and he screamed. He's been watching the Croc Hunter for years. It's been a huge shock.
 
Yes, I was watching Anderson Cooper and the mentioned the tribute to him on Sunday.

I was crying again :( I also watched Larry King. He was just great.
 
Terri is very fortunate to have such a huge support team behind her. Everybody up there is family, be they staff, best mates, or blood realtions.. they are family and Terri has that supoort.
 
Nutsy said:
Terri is very fotunate to have such a huge support team behind her. Everybody up there is family, be they staff, best mates, or blood realtions.. they are family and Terri has that supoort.


That's great. :( They were such a lovely couple, and had a wonderful family.

Just the other day I was watching a show on the travel channel when they did an RV trip all over America and then Australia, and it was just such a wonderful family. :sad2:
 
Irwin's death caught on videotape
POSTED: 3:09 a.m. EDT, September 5, 2006
Adjust font size:
BRISBANE, Australia (CNN) -- "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin, the Australian naturalist killed by a stingray on Monday, was filmed removing a poisonous barb from his chest just before he died, according to news reports.

Irwin's manager John Stainton, who was among the television crew on the reef, said the accident was caught on videotape, according to The Associated Press.

He described the footage of his friend dying as "terrible," the AP reported.

"It shows that Steve came over the top of the ray and the tail came up, and spiked him (in the chest), and he pulled it out and the next minute he's gone," AP reported Stainton as saying.

"That was it. The cameraman had to shut down (after that)," Stainton said.

As fellow countrymen and fans from around the world mourned his death, it was announced that a state funeral for Irwin would be held if his family so chose, an Australian state premier said.

"We will honor Steve Irwin in whatever way his family wants," said Queensland Premier Peter Beattie, speaking to CNN affiliate Channel Seven.

" ... We will approach the family and we would obviously be keen to honor him in some sort of way from the Queensland Government point of view, from the state's point of view, but we would only do that with the family's approval."

For the past week, Irwin, 44, had been working on an underwater documentary at Batt Reef in the Great Barrier Reef off Port Douglas in Queensland state.

Bad weather for the past few days had made it impossible to proceed with a planned taping for the Animal Planet channel, so Irwin instead chose Monday to shoot "a couple of soft stories for a new TV show we're doing," Stainton said.

"He and the underwater cameraman went out to do some pieces on the reef and coral and stuff good for the kids' show and, unfortunately, he came out over the top of a stingray that was buried in the sand and the barb went up and hit him in the chest."

Rescuers put Irwin aboard his research vessel, Croc 1, and attempted to resuscitate him during the 30-minute dash to nearby Lowe Isle, where a medical helicopter was available to take him to a hospital, but the effort proved futile.

The barb had pierced his chest, hospital sources said. News reports say he went into cardiac arrest after he was stung. His body was flown to the city of Cairns.

Irwin was director of the Australian Zoo in Queensland. He is survived by his American-born wife, Terri, and their two children, Bindi Sue, 8, and Robert (Bob), 3.

Terri Irwin was told of her husband's death while on a walking tour in Tasmania, and returned Monday night to the Sunshine Coast with the children.

'There's always a risk'
"It's just one of these bizarre events that really make you take stock of your life," Animal Planet host Jeff Corwin told CNN. "The reality is, there's always a risk when you work with wildlife. You do your best to take precautions."

Fellow animal handler and conservationist Jack Hanna said, "It's a tragic thing. It's unbelievable, really. When you think of Steve Irwin, you think of people who are invincible."

Hanna agreed with Corwin that the accident underscores the danger of working with wild animals.

"Ninety-nine percent of the time, when someone is hurt by an animal, it is your fault," he said. "You have to be careful of that. You have to know what your limits are. What that animal is.

"People use the word dangerous and that sometimes is a word that's not fair to that animal because the animal has been given the defenses that God gave it, so you have to understand what all that is involved and if you understand that, hopefully nothing will happen."

Irwin's exuberant approach to nature conservation and the environment also won him a global following, and he and his wife became well-known figures on international television.

TV viewers loved his outlandish stunts, even though one of them generated controversy.

Many viewers were upset with him two years ago when he held out his infant son as he was feeding a snapping crocodile at his zoo.

In 2003, Irwin spoke to the Australian Broadcasting Corp.'s Australian Story television program about how he was perceived in his home country.

"When I see what's happened all over the world, they're looking at me as this very popular, wildlife warrior Australian bloke," he said. "And yet back here in my own country, some people find me a little bit embarrassing. You know, there's this -- they kind of cringe, you know, 'cause I'm coming out with 'crikey' and 'look at this beauty.'"

Fund may be established
Discovery Communications, which produces Animal Planet, said it was considering setting up a fund that would accept donations in Irwin's name to support wildlife protection, education, conservation, Irwin's zoo and the education of his children.

A sensory garden located outside the company's Silver Springs, Maryland, headquarters will be renamed in his honor, said Annie Howell, senior vice president of communications for Discovery Communications.

At the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, which has an exhibit where people can safely touch stingrays, marine biologist Ray Davis said stingray barbs are serrated, can reach 12 inches in length and are used as a defensive mechanism.

"The stingray swings its tail up over its back; the barb is then not really laying against the tail but comes out a bit and allows them to slash or jab to try and get the predator away from them."

Once the barb has pierced the skin, it injects venom, which can be excruciatingly painful, said the vice president of zoological operations, who said he was speaking from experience.

"It can be very crippling," he said.

But fish venom is heat-sensitive, and relief is almost immediate once the affected area is immersed in near-scalding water, he said.

CNN's John Vause contributed to this report.
 
Condolence books to allow people to send a message of sympathy to the family of Steve Irwin are now available at Parliament House and the Queensland Executive Building in Brisbane.

People wanting to acknowledge the loss of Steve Irwin can also log onto http://www.qld.gov.au/announcements/steve_irwin.html
to send a message which will be passed onto the Irwin family.
 














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