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Updated Friday, December 23, 2011 0:14 am TWN, By Rod McGuirk, AP |
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Fluffy the crocodile survives being hit by bus in AustraliaThe 4-foot, 3-inch (1.3-meter) saltwater crocodile underwent emergency surgery and then spent 11 days recovering in the Marlin Coast Veterinary Hospital after the late night accident in a beachside suburb of Cairns, Doug English said. “It was pretty dopey for a couple of days and then it got fairly cranky so obviously it was feeling a lot better,” English said. While young crocodiles were often killed by cars on Cairns' roads, Fluffy — so named by vet nurses because she was found with a “fluffy duck” in her jaws — was the first English said he knew of to survive such an accident. He praised the bravery of sugar cane farmer Andrew Herrington in bringing the injured reptile in. “Crocs go off like a steel trap — bang! — in a split second,” English said of their powerful jaws. “That's how they can catch a duck in the air.” Herrington said he was driving home after midnight on Dec. 10 when he came upon a bus driver trying to coax the injured crocodile off the road with a stick. The crocodile had caught a duck and was headed across the road with it toward a creek when it was hit. Herrington said he distracted the croc with a flashlight in the eyes before throwing a pair of overalls over her head. He then used electrical tape to secure her jaws shut before bundling her into his SUV and taking her to the veterinary hospital where English immediately performed surgery. “She was quite agitated, but I didn't think there was any great risk of personal harm,” Herrington said. “My main concern was for saving the little thing,” he said. Fluffy was transferred Wednesday to the Cairns Tropical Zoo, where she will continue to recuperate before she is returned to the wild. | |||||||||||||