Monday, September 04, 2006

"look at this beauty"

What I love about Steve Irwin's energy is he made you smile with his sure and childlike delight over the scary crocodiles. Underneath it you knew he respected the wild bits about these crocodiles. He loved the unloveable animals and allowed us to love them too. What a lesson for our lives. What a legacy to pass on 'loving the unloveable'.

I can not believe he is gone and especially the morning after Father's Day. My last and favorite memory was watching Steve with his young daughter Bindi on the Oprah show. This has been a few years back but he just made me smile. Seeing the enthusiam and exuberance being passed on in his daughter was pure joy for me. I also love how he just oozed love for his wife and kids. More of that, please!

We would learn a great deal if we gave all the energy we have into our families, passions and dreams. Our world would surely change for the better and happiness would well up within our hearts.

Thank you, Terri and family for sharing your Steve with us.

SYDNEY, Australia (CNN) -- Steve Irwin, the TV presenter known as the "Crocodile Hunter," has died after being stung by a stingray in a marine accident off Australia's north coast.

Media reports say Irwin was snorkeling at Batt Reef, a part of the Great Barrier Reef about 9 miles (about 15 kilometers) from the town of Port Douglas, when the incident happened on Monday morning.

Irwin, 44, was killed by a stingray barb that pierced his chest, according to Cairns police sources.

Irwin was in the area to film pieces for a show called "Ocean's Deadliest" with Phillippe Cousteau, grandson of Jacques, Irwin's manager and friend John Stainton told CNN's "American Morning." But weather had prevented the crew from doing work for that program, said Stainton, so Irwin decided to do some softer features for a new children's TV show he was doing with his daughter, Bindi.

"He came over the top of a stingray that was buried in the sand, and the barb came up and hit him in the chest," said Stainton.

Ambulance officers confirmed they attended a reef fatality Monday morning off Port Douglas, according to Australian media.

Queensland Police Services also confirmed Irwin's death and said his family had been notified. Irwin was director of the Australia Zoo in Queensland.

He is survived by his American-born wife Terri and their two children, Bindi Sue, born 1998, and Robert (Bob), born December 2003.

"The world has lost a great wildlife icon, a passionate conservationist and one of the proudest dads on the planet," Stainton told reporters in Cairns, according to The Associated Press. "He died doing what he loved best and left this world in a happy and peaceful state of mind. He would have said, 'Crocs Rule!' "

Australia Prime Minister John Howard said he was "shocked and distressed at Steve Irwin's sudden, untimely and freakish death," according to AP. "It's a huge loss to Australia."

Irwin became a popular figure on Australian and international television through Irwin's close handling of wildlife, most notably the capture and relocation of crocodiles.

Irwin's enthusiastic approach to nature conservation and the environment won him a global following. He was known for his exuberance and use of the catch phrase "Crikey!"

"His message is really about conservation: He really wants to leave the world a better place for everybody," Animal Planet's Maureen Smith told CNN.com in April.

"It's unbelievable, really," Jack Hanna, the host of "Jack Hanna's Animal Adventure" and director emeritus of the Columbus (Ohio) Zoo, told CNN. "You think of Steve Irwin and you think 'invincible.' "

Hanna, a friend of Irwin's, noted that Irwin's persona of the Crocodile Hunter was no act. Irwin grew up around crocodiles, snakes and other animals at his parents' Queensland Reptile and Fauna Park and had been handling such creatures since he was a child.

"The guy lived his life this way," said Hanna. "It was how he was raised. You knew that this guy, from the time he was 8 or 9 years old, was working with crocodiles and snakes."

Though stingrays can be threatening, their sting -- usually prompted by self-defense -- is not often fatal. The bull ray that apparently stung Irwin was "a one-in-a-million thing," wildlife documentary maker Ben Cropp told TIME. "I have swum with many rays, and I have only had one do that to me."

"A wild animal is like a loaded gun -- it can go off at any time," Hanna told CNN. "You have to be careful of that." But, he added, it's not the animals who are inherently dangerous, but the way they may react around humans. "It's not fair to the animal. It's only using the defenses that God gave it," said Hanna.

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, the ABC reported.

"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.' "

"He has left a legacy," Stainton told CNN. "That people do love some of the unloved animals like crocodiles and reptiles that people wanted to kill. He's actually put a position in their hearts for them. I want that to continue. ... I want people to really go out there and remember Steve Irwin for what he really was, which was a great conservationist, saving wildlife and actually promoting wildlife that people didn't love."
fr: CNN's full story
tributes for Steve Irwin

utopian father

3 comments:

  1. 'Shocking' death caught on tape
    September 5, 2006 - 10:08AM

    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 yesterday was "shocking".

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

    "I did see the footage and it's shocking," Mr Stainton told reporters today in Cairns.

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

    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.
    theage.com.au 's story

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  2. September 6, 2006 - 10:51AM

    Tears flowed on US television today as America's top talkshow hosts delivered emotional tributes to Steve Irwin.

    The Crocodile Hunter was one of the most popular guests on American TV, charming the hosts and viewers with his enthusiastic tales about creatures he had battled in the outback.

    Irwin often brought deadly snakes or alligators onto the set, ensuring a spike in ratings for the shows and shrieks and screams from the hosts and their audiences.

    America's top-rating late night talkshow host, CBS's Jay Leno, delivered an emotional tribute to Irwin and described him as a great ambassador for Australia.

    The Crocodile Hunter was a Leno favourite, clocking up 11 appearances in nine years.

    "He was one of our all time favorite guests and will be missed," Leno said.

    "I think for many Americans he's become the face of Australia and he was a great ambassador. He represented all that was good about the country."

    Irwin also was a regular on America's ABC network, appearing numerous times on the New York-based Live with Regis & Kelly and Barbara Walters's weekday talkshow, The View.

    The most emotional tribute came from Kelly Ripa, the pint-sized blonde host of Live with Regis & Kelly who became close friends with Irwin and his family.
    more from theage.com.au

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  3. The footage, captured by a cameraman working with Mr Irwin, has been viewed by police who say Mr Irwin did not aggravate the ray.
    more from theage.com.au

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