In general, Australian laws may not be followed, the main thing is to report this in small print. Steve Irwin died instantly: a biography A hair's breadth from death

29.06.2020

A longtime friend of the tragically deceased actor, showman and naturalist Steve Irwin spoke about the circumstances of his death.


"There was no blood in the water, it was not very clear ... Something happened to this animal that made him buck, and Steve was in the wrong place at the wrong time. If he had received a blow in another place, then we would now didn't talk about the tragedy," said Peter West, the owner of the boat on which the film crew was sailing.

The operator and another member of the team pulled Irwin out of the water, put him on an inflatable boat and took him to the support vessel. Team members said that he was practically unconscious after being stung by a stingray and died during transport.

Mark Mikan, a researcher at the Australian Institute of Marine Science, says that although the spines of stingrays are covered with poisonous mucus, the main damage is still caused by ruptured blood vessels. "The spikes have very fine teeth, like arrowheads. When the stingray removes the spike from the prey, the teeth tear through the flesh. It's like being stabbed with a serrated knife," he says.

Chris Winder, a toxicologist at the University of New South Wales, says the stingray venom is very slow-acting. Wounded people are sometimes unaware that toxins are gradually killing their tissues.

In 1988, 12-year-old Jeff Zamel died a week after being pricked in the chest by a three-meter stingray. After spending two days in the hospital, he was discharged home. A few days later, Jeff got up from the table after dinner, and then just dropped dead.

"If Steve Irwin died so quickly, then it wasn't toxins," says Winder.

Mark Mikan recalled that most stingray injuries occur when people step on them while walking in shallow water. First aid usually consists of washing the wound with water to deactivate the toxin. The victim usually experiences excruciating pain.

The footage of the fatal attack has been handed over to the Queensland State Police, according to The Australian.

State Premier Peter Beatty said Irvine would be buried with state honors if his family so desired.

The Crocodile Hunter program first aired in 1992. Steve has managed to trademark his image as an intrepid and enthusiastic wildlife-studyer, and his series has been a worldwide success on the Discovery Channel.

Steve Irwin was born in the Australian state of Victoria in 1962. His father created a reptile park in Queensland in the 70s of the last century.

Since 1991, Steve Irwin continued the family business and soon created the first series of the film "Crocodile Hunter" (Crocodile Hunter), which became popular all over the world. This year Irvine was awarded for his contribution to the Australian tourism industry. The award was given to Irwin's contribution to the promotion of the Green Continent in wildlife documentaries and the creation of the Australia Zoo.

Repeatedly, Irwin was in situations where his life literally hung in the balance. He had a large number of wounds received in contact with animals.

As Steve himself said, the first time he received serious damage in the early 90s, when he dived from the bow of the boat onto a crocodile. The crocodile was sitting on a rock, which Irwin hit with his shoulder, and the stone crushed him to the bone. The bone cut through all the important muscles, ligaments and tendons.

Another time in East Timor, he was rescuing a crocodile that had fallen into a concrete pipe and there was no way to get it out. So Irvine dived in with the animal. The crocodile grabbed him with a death grip, as a result, the same hand was ripped open again, and this time the tendon was torn.

One day, Irwin was hit on the head by a crocodile he caught underwater. Then his knees and shins were cut when he rode a 4-meter crocodile. On another occasion, on his way to filming, he had to rescue a kangaroo on the side of the road. When he approached the animal, the kangaroo hit him and cut his lip in half.

The 44-year-old TV presenter, environmentalist, animal advocate and crocodile lover died Sunday in the warm waters of the Great Barrier Reef. Steve, a crocodile hunter, was filming another documentary, this time about the underwater life of the ocean. In the water, he was attacked by a sea cat - a large stingray with a sharp poisonous spike on its tail. With this 20-cm gun, a flat triangular creature killed a journalist - a thorn pierced his heart and lung. By the time Irwin was pulled out and handed over to the arms of the paramedics who arrived by helicopter, he was already dead. Poison has nothing to do with it, Irwin died from a penetrating injury.

Police in Queensland, Australia, confirmed the naturalist's death and informed his family. Steve Irwin is survived by his wife and two children.

There are, of course, a few inconsistencies. First, stingrays do not attack people themselves. Secondly, how could a peace-loving fish, causing most of the injuries to the feet of the bathers who step on them, kill an adult large man, whom even a five-meter crocodile could not overcome? ..

Steve Irwin was one of the most popular people in Australia. He made documentaries, hosted television shows, and even starred in the feature film The Crocodile Hunter, which is utterly autobiographical and nonsensical. In it, Irwin played a crocodile conservationist who rescued vicious warm-blooded reptiles from poachers. At the same time, it turned out that the most important, fattest and most nasty crocodile, which the poachers hunted the most, swallowed a secret beacon, and would-be hunters, over whom the mad Irwin cracks vile jokes, are actually secret agents.

In addition, Irwin was the face and goodwill ambassador of the Australian Quarantine Inspection Service. He was the face of the Quarantine Matters campaign and it was the most successful ad campaign for the Australian Quarantine Inspection Service.

Irwin was loved by everyone except children's rights advocates.

He once staged a trick that pales in comparison to trying to throw a newborn son off a balcony: Irwin was feeding a live chicken to a crocodile while holding a sleeping baby Bob in his other hand. Then he laid the baby down a meter from the pond where the carnivorous reptile lived. The audience was furious, and after that, until his death (it was in January 2004), Irwin refused to apologize, arguing that there was no danger to the child, that he kept everything under control.

And in general, none of your crocodile business.

But that's not all. Irwin was once charged with violating wildlife laws while filming a documentary about life in Antarctica. He was then accused of getting too close to penguins, sea lions and whales. And interfering with the life of wild animals in Antarctica is a criminal offense that is punishable by a fine of a million and two years in prison. The investigation was terminated due to the lack of corpus delicti, although if Irwin treated penguins in the same way as with crocodiles: he jumped on them from above, forced them to open their mouths, put various parts of the body into their mouths and at the same time yelled a lot and cheerfully, then, of course, he needs to it was still then put on the bunk.

In any case, all this sheds light on what happened between him and the spiketail in the water column.

After all, stingrays themselves do not attack people and they can hit an underwater cinematographer in the heart with their tail only for reasons of self-defense. Perhaps the fish simply did not know that Irwin was a great original. “Stingrays only sting in self-defense. These are not aggressive animals, they will only strike if they feel threatened," said Dr Brian Fry, deputy director of the University of Melbourne's Poison Research Center in Australia. Probably, the stingray considered Irwin's invasion a violation of his personal space and a mockery of the fauna.

On Monday, actor, showman and naturalist Steve Irwin spoke about the circumstances of his death.

"There was no blood in the water, it was not very clear ... Something happened to this animal that made him buck, and Steve was in the wrong place at the wrong time. If he had received a blow in another place, then we would now didn't talk about the tragedy," said Peter West, the owner of the boat on which the film crew was sailing.

The operator and another member of the team pulled Irwin out of the water, put him on an inflatable boat and took him to the support vessel. Team members said that he was practically unconscious after being stung by a stingray and died during transport.

Mark Mikan, a researcher at the Australian Institute of Marine Science, says that although the spines of stingrays are covered with poisonous mucus, the main damage is still caused by ruptured blood vessels. "The spikes have very fine teeth, like arrowheads. When the stingray removes the spike from the prey, the teeth tear through the flesh. It's like being stabbed with a serrated knife," he says.

Chris Winder, a toxicologist at the University of New South Wales, says the stingray venom is very slow-acting. Wounded people are sometimes unaware that toxins are gradually killing their tissues.

In 1988, 12-year-old Jeff Zamel died a week after being pricked in the chest by a three-meter stingray. After spending two days in the hospital, he was discharged home. A few days later, Jeff got up from the table after dinner, and then just dropped dead.

"If Steve Irwin died so quickly, then it wasn't toxins," says Winder.

Mark Mikan recalled that most stingray injuries occur when people step on them while walking in shallow water. First aid usually consists of washing the wound with water to deactivate the toxin. The victim usually experiences excruciating pain.

The footage of the fatal attack was handed over to the Queensland State Police, according to The Australian.

State Premier Peter Beatty said Irvine would be buried with state honors if his family so desired.

The Crocodile Hunter program first aired in 1992. Steve has managed to trademark his image as an intrepid and enthusiastic wildlife-studyer, and his series has been a worldwide success on the Discovery Channel.

Steve Irwin was born in the Australian state of Victoria in 1962. His father created a reptile park in Queensland in the 70s of the last century.

Since 1991, Steve Irwin continued the family business and soon created the first series of the film "Crocodile Hunter" (Crocodile Hunter), which became popular all over the world. This year Irvine was awarded for his contribution to the Australian tourism industry. The award was given to Irwin's contribution to the promotion of the Green Continent in wildlife documentaries and the creation of the Australia Zoo.

Repeatedly, Irwin was in situations where his life literally hung in the balance. He had a large number of wounds received in contact with animals.

As Steve himself said, the first time he received serious damage in the early 90s, when he dived from the bow of the boat onto a crocodile. The crocodile was sitting on a rock, which Irwin hit with his shoulder, and the stone crushed him to the bone. The bone cut through all the important muscles, ligaments and tendons.

On another occasion in East Timor, he was rescuing a crocodile that had fallen into a concrete pipe and there was no way to get it out. So Irvine dived in with the animal. The crocodile grabbed him with a death grip, as a result, the same hand was ripped open again, and this time the tendon was torn.

One day, Irwin was hit on the head by a crocodile he caught underwater. Then his knees and shins were cut when he rode a 4-meter crocodile. On another occasion, on his way to filming, he had to rescue a kangaroo on the side of the road. When he approached the animal, the kangaroo hit him and cut his lip in half.

Despite everything, Steve Irwin continued to make films. “If you can’t laugh at yourself, then you are too correct and your life is too boring,” he said.

Irwin is survived by two children, Bindi Sue and Bob Clarence. His wife Terry assisted him on set.

I dedicate this post Stephen Irwin- one of the most popular Australian naturalists.
“If you can’t laugh at yourself, then you are too correct and your life is too boring” (Steve Irwin)

September 2012 marks six years since Steve Irwin did not come into this world. Steve's life was cut short at the age of 44 due to an absurd accident that happened on the set of another series about wildlife ...


Stephen Robert Irwin Born February 22, 1962 in the family of naturalists Lin and Bob Irwin. Steve grew up on his parent's reptile farm in Queensland, helping Lyn and Bob care for the farm's inhabitants from a young age. The first step on the road to fame was his participation in a government program for the humane movement of crocodiles without the use of tranquilizers. The idea of ​​humane treatment of crocodiles Steve Irwin defended in his TV show. It was television that brought him worldwide fame. Even when dealing with the most venomous snakes in the world Steve Irwin never used violence.

Steve became a popular Australian naturalist, television journalist and author of numerous wildlife films such as The Crocodile Hunter ( "The Crocodile Hunter"), TV show "Crok Files", "The Crocodile Hunter Diaries" ( "Diaries of a Crocodile Hunter"). Owner of Australia Zoo in Beerwah, Queensland.
Steve Irwin started by catching crocodiles around Queensland since childhood for his parents' reptile park. Since 1991, Steve Irwin continued the family business and soon created the first series of the film. "The Crocodile Hunter"(Crocodile Hunter), which has become popular all over the world. This year, Irvine was awarded for his contribution to the Australian tourism industry. The award was given to Irwin's contribution to the promotion of the Green Continent in wildlife documentaries and the creation of the Australia Zoo.

Repeatedly irvine He was in situations where his life literally hung in the balance. He had a large number of wounds received in contact with animals.As he himself said Steve Irwin, the first time he was seriously injured in the early 90s, when he dived from the bow of the boat onto a crocodile. The crocodile was sitting on a rock, which Irwin hit with his shoulder, and the stone crushed him to the bone. The bone cut through all the important muscles, ligaments and tendons.
On another occasion in East Timor, he was rescuing a crocodile that had fallen into a concrete pipe and there was no way to get it out. So Irvine dived in with the animal. The crocodile grabbed him with a death grip, as a result, the same hand was ripped open again, and this time the tendon was torn.
One day, Irwin was hit on the head by a crocodile he caught underwater. Then his knees and shins were cut when he rode a 4-meter crocodile. On another occasion, on his way to filming, he had to rescue a kangaroo on the side of the road. When he approached the animal, the kangaroo hit him and cut his lip in half.

Steve captivated me from the very first frame of the series "The Crocodile Hunter", which once went on the TNT channel. I didn't miss a single episode and was looking forward to the next one with great impatience. This man with a magnificent cheerful charisma and genuine positive, lively smile, mischievous freckles and funny jokes, he skillfully talked about the wildlife of Australia, kissed the noses and tops of poisonous lizards, tickled dangerous spiders, played with turtles, teased snakes and, of course, brilliantly tamed crocodiles. In Australia, he had no equal in taming these dangerous reptiles.













For the first time the program "The Crocodile Hunter" aired in 1992. Steve managed to trademark his image as an intrepid and enthusiastic animal-studyer, and his series was broadcast with great success around the world on discovery.

In 1992 Steve married Terry Baines, which, like him, was engaged in the study of wildlife. All TV shows Terry was directly involved with her husband. His film "The Crocodile Hunter", beginning with the filming of Steve and Terry's honeymoon (during which they were crocodile catching), has been shown in more than 120 countries around the world. Terry Irwin she was always by his side and helped her husband in all his reckless ideas, assisted him on the set.








They had two children and even then Terry with children was next to her husband. Here it is - true love, when the whole family is together.










And this photo once caused a wave of discontent in the media, Steve even received a complaint to the court when he appeared with his barely born son at his next crocodile show. It is worth noting that Irwin's tricks were sometimes beyond the bounds of universal understanding. In 2004, during a show at the Queensland Zoo, he held his one-month-old son just a meter away from the jaws of a predator. During the broadcast, dozens of people called the child protection hotline. To the dismay of the audience Steve Irwin he held his one-month-old son Robert with one hand, and with the other he waved a piece of chicken in front of the four-meter-long crocodile's mouth. And when the meat disappeared in the teeth of a predator, irvine turned to his son and said: "Good boy, Bob!" Myself irvine subsequently said that he constantly kept the situation under control, and nothing threatened his child.


On the set of the programs, there were many funny situations, as well as life-threatening ones. Steve was repeatedly bitten by snakes, scorpions stung, he was also injured by his beloved crocodiles, but this inexhaustible energetic man who loved life so much just laughed at danger in the face, because he loved all these living creatures and was happy to communicate with them again and again and again.













Steve Irwin absurdly died September 4, 2006 years on the set of another TV show, having received a fatal blow from a stingray in the region of the heart. On the occasion of his death, a national funeral was organized, and the day of his death in Australia is considered a universal day of mourning.
At Steve Irwin left two children, Bindi Sue and Bob Clarence. His wife Terry assisted him on set.



At 11 am Steve Irwin went scuba diving to film electric rays off the Great Barrier Reef. He was collecting material for his next film. "Deadly Creatures of the Ocean". The leader has already descended to the slopes many times. In principle, this predator is rarely truly dangerous to humans: only two deaths of tourists stung by stingrays have been recorded off the coast of Australia.But apparently, Steve teased his death too often. One of the fish attacked the leader when he was above her. The stingray raised its tail with a poisonous sting at the end and hit Steve in the chest with it. The sting hit right - the naturalist's heart stopped before any of his team had a chance to react.


Producer and director John Stainton program said that he watched a tape that captured the last moments of Irwin's life,and these shots shocked him. “It was very difficult to watch it, because you watch someone die ... and it’s terrible,” - he confessed. “You can see how he rose above the stingray, the tail of which shot up and pierced his chest. He pulled out the thorn, and a minute laterhe was gone. That's all. The cameraman had to stop filming.»

"There was no blood in the water, it was not very clear ... Something happened to this animal that made him buck, and Steve was in the wrong place at the wrong time. If he had received a blow in another place, then we would now didn't talk about the tragedy, - said Peter West, the owner of the vessel on which the film crew sailed. The operator and another member of the team pulled Irwin out of the water, put him on an inflatable boat and took him to the support vessel. Team members said that he was practically unconscious after being stung by a stingray and died during transport. John Stainton added that Irwin did not provoke the stingray, but simply floated over it when he was attacked.

Mark Mikan, a researcher at the Australian Institute of Marine Science, says that although stingray spikes are covered in poisonous mucus, the main damage is caused by ruptured blood vessels. "The spikes have very fine teeth, like arrowheads. When the stingray removes the spike from the prey, the teeth tear through the flesh. It's like being stabbed with a serrated knife." he says.Toxicologist Chris Winder from the University of New South Wales says the stingray venom is very slow acting. Wounded people are sometimes unaware that toxins are gradually killing their tissues. "If Steve Irwin died so quickly, then it wasn't toxins", - speaks winder.

The tape of the fatal attack was handed over to the Queensland State Police, Prime Minister Peter Beatty said that irvine will be buried with state honors, if his family so desires. Relatives and friends of Irwin have repeatedly stated that they will do everything possible so that this entry is not replicated inInternet and insisted on its destruction. However, to protect from prying eyes the tragic pictures of the death of a naturalist, deathwhich is already being compared with the death of Princess Diana, failed ...


Interesting Facts
In 2009, a rare tropical mountain snail, Crikey steveirwini Stanisic, 2009, was named after Irwin.
After the death of her husband, his wife Terry Irwin dedicated a book to her memories of their life together: "Steve and Me"

Steve Irwin - very popular Australian naturalist, television journalist; best known as the creator of numerous films about wildlife, in particular, about crocodiles - "The Crocodile Hunter" ("Hunter for crocodiles"), "Crok Files", "The Crocodile Hunter Diaries" ("Diaries of a crocodile hunter"). Founder of the Australia Zoo in Queensland.


Steve Irwin (Stephen Robert Irwin) was born in 1962 in the suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, in the family of naturalists Bob and Lyn Irwin (Bob and Lyn Irwin). He grew up on a farm in Queensland where his parents were breeding reptiles. Steve helped his parents from an early age, fed the crocodiles and looked after them. After graduating from Caloundra State High School, he went to North Queensland, where he caught crocodiles that posed a real danger to people. It is curious that Steve's work was practically unpaid, and his altruism was explained by his love for these animals he already understood, as well as by the fact that he left the caught individuals in his park.

Fame came to Irwin with participation in the national program for the humane treatment of crocodiles, or rather, with their movement without the use of tranquilizers. Steve has repeatedly promoted the same position in his TV show "Croc Files". Television brought Steve Irwin worldwide popularity and fame - the series "Crocodile Hunter" ("Crocodile Hunter"), which started in 1997, turned out to be "top". In this docu-series, Steve managed to portray himself as an intrepid research enthusiast, and the tape was a huge success around the world on the Discovery Channel. The fame of the young naturalist went beyond Australia - Steve was very popular in the United States.

Then for services to the popularization of Australia in the cinema and contribution to the tourism industry of the Green Continent, Irvine b

was awarded. In addition, he was awarded for his huge contribution to the creation and development of the zoo "Australia" (Australia Zoo).

Steve Irwin sincerely enjoyed his work - despite the fact that he was doing his favorite thing, his name turned into a trademark, and interest in films with his participation remained unchanged. Steve repeatedly took risks, sometimes his life hung literally in the balance - he had several injuries, but he was not seriously injured even once. He always performed any tricks himself, sometimes approaching animals at a critically close distance.

It is noteworthy that Steve's tricks sometimes bordered on the usual understanding of what was permitted. So, on January 2, 2004, during a performance at the Queensland Zoo, he held his one-month-old son with one hand, holding out a piece of chicken to a crocodile with the other. At the same time, the child was only a meter away from the predator's mouth. And when the predator swallowed the thrown piece, Irwin said to his son: "Good boy, Bob!" Dozens of people then turned to the child protection society via a hotline with a call to deal with the "reckless" parent.

Irwin himself later said that he kept the situation under control throughout the show, and probably knew that nothing threatened his child. However, the public remained then with a different opinion.

In 1992, Steve married Terri Raines, also a wildlife researcher. In all films, Terry participated with her husband. By the way, his film "Hunter on kr

okodilov" begins with the filming of Steve and Terry's honeymoon - they were just catching crocodiles. In July 1998, the daughter Bindi Sue Irwin was born in the family. Son Robert (Robert Clarence "Bob" Irwin) was born in December 2003 It was Bob who became a participant in the show that caused a wave of indignation.

It is curious that while crocodiles and other dangerous predators were very supportive of Steve, he was strongly disliked by parrots, becoming the only representatives of the animal world with whom he did not have contact. "I don't know what they have against me, but they always try to bite me," Irwin said in an interview.

Steve Irwin died on September 4, 2006, at the Great Barrier Reef, while working on another documentary about animals. The picture with the fatal name for Irwin "Ocean" s Deadliest "(Deadly dangerous creatures of the ocean" tragically put an end to his life. Steve was hit in the chest by a spike-tailed stingray, this blow definitely hit the heart. The tragedy of the situation was that usually the bite of this the stingray is not fatal, it was a hit in the heart that was fatal.Steve Irwin's heart stopped instantly, even before the team members had time to react.According to statistics, only two cases of death of people stung by stingrays were recorded off the coast of Australia.

It is known that all copies of the video recording of Irwin's death were deliberately destroyed for safety, the tape itself was transferred to his wife Terri



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