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Riots, Burning Cars, and Barricades: all in a normal days work at Cesar Baggio.
December 16, 2008, 6:54 pm
Filed under: Everyday in Lille, Weird News Stories

Reading: Breaking Dawn, last in the Twilight series. The first half of it is the best of the whole series; the last half is just as dull as the rest. To be followed by a little bit of literature, A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini, author of The Kite Runner.

Watching: Saying farewell to Dexter, Heroes and Californication for the year. Just starting on Battlestar Galactica as the webisodes make their appearance. Also, La Cage Aux Folles, as in the musical, based on the French 70’s film, which I saw from the cheapseats in London; you may know it by it’s American remake, The Birdcage, starring Robin Williams. I also rewatched Wesele (The Wedding), a hilarious Polish film, which I saw while staying with a couchhost in Paris.

I went over to the UK for the weekend, but more interesting things have been going on since I returned.

Monday I arrived back at 5am (overnight bus), and was glad to slump into bed after sending a quick email to the colleague whose class I’d been planning to attend that day, telling her I was too tired. When I woke, her responding email told me it was no problem that I’d not been able to make it: students had rioted outside my school, set a car on fire, destroyed a bus shelter, and prevented her students from attending the class in question.

Meanwhile, today (Tuesday), I had to convince security guards in poor French that, indeed, I was a teacher (despite the frayed jeans and lack of a leather satchel), and that they could let me through the barricades while students behind me set fire to newspapers and tyres. Later on the riot police turned up, arrested some teenagers, and effectively cancelled the rest of my classes that morning.

So, what’s going on? France’s education minister, fueled by Sarkozy’s fervent desire for reform, has been redesigning the secondary level education system. Basically, France currently has a general competitive exam (the BAC), 8am-6pm days for students, with compulsory core subjects, like the Americans; the new reform would make the system more similar to the British and Australian systems where exams are specific to the subject (A-Levels, Year 12 subjects), choices are more flexible, the year is split into 2 semestres instead of 3 terms, and there are fewer compulsory subjects.

Without knowing too much about it, and biased by my own experiences, I don’t see the issue with the reforms – they seem to be a long time coming (the 8am-6pm days my secondary and tertiary students endure are ludicrously long, and out of step with the rest of the French ideal to working to live as opposed to living to work; and increased flexibility, choice and specialisation is always a good thing). But the teachers and students here are violently concerned about the consequences of these reforms, so there must be more to it.

Around the country, teachers – and students – have been protesting and demonstrating against the reforms. It meant nothing to me other than an occasional free class to listen to my audiobooks and wander around the grounds of Lycee Cesar Baggio (lycee = high school, the school I’m stationed at).

However, some students of Baggio decided they wanted to, well, get out of class and burn some shit up, and they did just that. I’d arrived last Friday to see steaming bitumen and Lille council workers cleaning the pavement of burning newspapers. I learnt later they were cleaning up the remains of several melted wheelie bins that had been set alight. The teacher I worked with, Francois, told me there’d been some excitement before I’d arrived. Rushing off to catch my bus after the lesson, I’d thought nothing more of it, until her email on Monday afternoon.

So, Tuesday, I turned up, early for once, to find a crowd of violent teenagers refusing students and teachers entry through the gates, having barricaded them with stolen chicken wire fences. A young female student tried to enter while I stood there, and was almost squashed behind the chicken wire; I could see the deputy proviseur (deputy principal) standing anxious behind a line of security guards through the fences. I figured out how to get in – through another entrance which was letting in teachers only. That morning, only three students attended my first class (they all were Baggio boarders, who lived on the school premises, and were not permitted to leave). The remaining two classes for that morning, no others made it through.

I spent the other two classes I had that morning standing in the staffroom watching the riot police clean up the kids. My colleagues seemed more concerned that the riot police had appeared – as Rene explained, when the riot police turn up, you know it’s bad, and that civil liberties are going to be thrown out the window.

When I left (no students turned up to my other classes, so I left early) I saw more students being arrested by the police, saw the smashed bus shelter, the scorch marks from yesterday’s burnt car, and smelt the stench of burnt plastic.

Tuesdays I work a split shift. I came back in the afternoon, to find everything back as normal. My afternoon classes went as normal, only the main topic of conversation was the riots. One student told me she’d climbed over a wall to enter, to avoid the students who had barricaded the front entrance. The others told me they didn’t think much of the element who’d incited the riot. It was all very interesting.

Mostly, it is the opinion of teachers and students here that the kids who incited the riot were just looking for trouble, and used the reforms as an excuse. Baggio is in a low-socioeconomic area; it’s a technical lycee, somewhat an equivalent of a TAFE college, where students learn a trade alongside a general education in Maths, Science and English. Most students are from disadvantaged backgrounds. Kids in these areas are not exactly the biggest fans of Sarkozy (French president) and Darcos (the minister of education), and they’d taken this oppourtunity to set stuff alight. However, to their defense, there are some protestors that genuinely believe the reforms are to the detriment of future generations: essentially, like all governments, Sarkozy’s is only interested in cutting back the budget, which the reforms would allow.

So, anyway, La Voix Du Nord, the local Nord newspaper, took some pretty wicked pictures, which I have reproduced here totally without authorisation (but for the benefit of my non-French speaking friends), but you can see them in the original context here:

http://photos.lavoix.com/main.php?g2_itemId=67024

In the background, that’s the metro (train) line running in the background, and the school I work at.

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Okay, there’s a kicker about this poor bus shelter. Notice that the middle panel has been busted. Look later.

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This is the bus shelter across the road. The one you saw before had the middle panel knocked out, remember? Wait for it.

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There it is, my school - Lycee Cesar Baggio - with the fires in front of it.

There it is, my school - Lycee Cesar Baggio - with the fires in front of it.

When I went back this afternoon, I took a few photos of the aftermath.

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Heres the bus shelter you first saw (the second is actually across the road). Yep, they fixed the middle glass on Monday – and then the next morning, the students destroyed the other two panels. I fully expect to see it fully fixed when I go past on Thursday. Hows that for efficiency?

Scorch marks from the burning car.

Scorch marks from the burning car.

Remains of the burning tyres.

Remains of the burning tyres.

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Scorchmarks on the previously barricaded gates.

Scorchmarks on the previously barricaded gates.

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“Lille, Athens, long live the riot”.

Many mentioned to me the connection between this riot and that which is happening in Greece at the moment. Apparently these students have been ‘inspired’ by them. It seems the disadvantaged are quite happy anywhere in the world to show the authorities what the mob can do.

So, anyway, this is my first experience of French revolutionism. Rene had been concerned that this was the image of France that me, as a foreigner, had been given. I assured him that actually it was pretty exciting, and interesting to see! How very French to witness a riot. Come on, there’s nothing better.

There were a few other students getting their riot on in several other areas nearby, only we took the cake: at Henin Beaumont, Armentieres, Wattrelos and Behal.

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Artois/2008/12/16/article_importante-mobilisation-lyc-eacute-enne.shtml

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Metropole_Lilloise/2008/12/16/article_les-lyc-eacute-ens-mobilis-eacute-s-agra.shtml

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Metropole_Lilloise/2008/12/16/article_wattrelos-une-voiture-incendiee-devant-l.shtml

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Artois/2008/12/15/article_lens-le-lyc-eacute-e-b-eacute-hal-occup.shtml

My last students of the day, all high level in English and very political, told me all about the motivations behind the riots, and the history of some of France’s more recent more impressive demonstrations. Apparently similar demonstrations of a few years back were prompted by an industrial relations law. This resembled Howard’s WorkChoices, where young workers were stripped of their rights to unfair dismissal. The resulting demonstrations paralysed the education system for a month. They also spoke about another riot, back in the 60’s, where the whole country was shutdown for three months (I remember seeing The Dreamers – excellent, though disturbing, movie by the way – so this one rang a bell).

I told them about the biggest protest I could remember of my time – the protest against Howard’s sending our troops to Iraq – and how the government (or, at least, John Howard) ignored us, although 10,000 people protested in Adelaide alone. My students told me we should consider burning a few cars – maybe the government would listen to us then. I gotta say – he’s gotta point.

So you guys back home who are demonstrating against the government for better wages for teachers: take some French advice, step it up a bit. What’s one less Range-Rover?*

*Of course, you would be ecologically sensible and burn the biggest car you can find. Just ignore the greenhouse gases – it’s all for the greater good :P .

Stories about the riots at Cesar Baggio over the last few days, all in French, unfortunately:

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Metropole_Lilloise/2008/12/16/article_lille-nouveaux-incidents-au-lyc-eacute-e.shtml

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Metropole_Lilloise/2008/12/15/article_lille-500-lyc-eacute-ens-dans-les-rues-c.shtml

http://www.lavoixdunord.fr/actualite/L_info_en_continu/Metropole_Lilloise/2008/12/15/article_lille-incidents-au-lyc-eacute-e-baggio.shtml



Brooke Satchwell talks about her experience in Mumbai.
November 28, 2008, 8:49 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

For non-Aussies, Brooke Satchwell is an Australian soap opera actress who has recently left (is it Neighbours? Or Home and Away?) her show and is popping up in other places.

She was in Mumbai working on a travel show and having dinner at the Taj Mahal hotel when the terrorists attacked – this is her account. I thought it was really interesting:

Brooke Satchwell tells of ordeal in Mumbai terror attacks

The Daily Telegraph

November 28, 2008 08:05am

Brooke Satchwell

Escape … Brooke Satchwell / supplied

AUSTRALIAN soap star Brooke Satchwell has detailed in her own words how she managed to escape the gunmen who unleashed terror on the streets of Mumbai.

I came over to India as an attachment crew member for a travel documentary called Nomad Traveller, thinking it would be a fantastic opportunity to work on my skills behind the camera and visit India.

I’d spent the afternoon at Leopolds cafe, where a number of the shootings occurred.

I left there, came back and met the rest of the crew. It was our second night here and we were having a production meeting.

There were nine of us who went down to Taj (Mahal hotel) for dinner.

Then it all began.

I’d just run down for a cigarette about 10pm and I walked back in from the front of the hotel.

As I walked in, instead of going to the second level I decided to use the bathroom downstairs, just down from the lobby where it all began.

I heard machine gun fire.

The adrenaline kicks in when you’re trying to work out what’s happening and if it’s real or not.

It became very clear very quickly that it was.

There were six other people in the bathroom.

People began to push into the toilet cubicles and lock them but I didn’t think it was a very safe option, so I encouraged everyone to come back out.


Gallery Pictures: soldiers move in on day two
Gallery Pictures: The massacre in Mumbai
PDF Timeline: How it unfolded
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Related story Satchwell angry at Government response
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We got in a closet about 2m by 50cm wide, closed the doors and hoped for the best.

There was an Indian woman, three staff and an Indian man. It was a pretty tight squeeze.

People with machine guns were walking around. I was looking at things I could use as weapons if they came to the door, like a metal broom-like contraption that I could see on the wall - not that it would have made much difference.

There were phones ringing and people talking very loudly, so I was trying to keep everyone quiet. Then the machinegun fire would start up again.

I was in constant SMS contact with David (boyfriend David Gross) while I was in the cupboard.

We were in there about 45 minutes, then some hotel security staff coaxed us to open the door. No police had arrived.

There was a dead body outside the bathroom, which we had to step over.

We ran down the stairs.

I ran out of the front of the hotel. Instincts told me to turn left, which was the vague direction of my hotel. I had run a couple of hundred metres when I bumped into an American Bollywood costume designer.

There were random shootings across the city. We sheltered behind a car then we started seeing people with guns nearby, so we ran into a hotel.

In my slightly disoriented state I realised that the hotel we had run to was right next to the one we were staying in.

The staff took us down some fire stairs and the hotel unlocked gates and we were able to get into the other hotel and charge our phones.

I’m just relieved. The others went through much more of an ordeal. They didn’t make it out until hours later, and they were dealing with grenades being thrown at doors.

My group made it out because they tied curtains together and crawled out a window. I’m proud to say it was our intrepid Aussie travellers who came up with that idea.

I was the only one out for the first few hours then probably about four hours later another four came out and, an hour later, we got the last four.

I was giving them updates of what I could see from the outside. We were watching explosions going off in the roof and there was potential that the building was going to collapse with them inside. They were asking if there was police or army outside because they were hearing that there were. The answer was no.

How do you pass that information on? The situation was out of control.

It was about 5am when I made it back to my hotel.

We’re incredibly fortunate. The rest of our crew were staying in the Taj and they lost everything … passports … everything. Their rooms are ablaze at the moment.

We spent all day holed up in our hotel room watching the live news feeds.

My next holiday is camping in my backyard and playing cricket.

- As told to Angela Saurine



Attack on Adelaide’s pink flamingo
November 5, 2008, 6:51 pm
Filed under: Weird News Stories

I was incensed when I read this: I love those flamingos! They’re the oldest in captivity in the world, and some kids thought it was a good idea to attack the 73 year old bird! He’s beautiful and very tame, having lived most of his life in the open flamingo exhibit. I hope he pulls through.

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Callie Watson (reporter)

October 30, 2008 10:20am

A BLIND flamingo believed to be one of the oldest in the world is in a critical condition after being bashed at Adelaide Zoo.

Four teenagers have been charged after visitors reported an incident to zoo staff that has left the unnamed male greater flamingo, aged about 78, “extremely stressed”.
Zoo staff said it appeared to have been beaten.

It was taken to the zoo’s animal hospital, where it remained under the close watch of keepers in a critical condition last night. The zoo has reported this morning that the bird is responding well to care and it is hoped he will pull through.

The animal, which arrived at zoo in the 1930s, shares its enclosure with a Chilean flamingo that arrived in the 1940s. Because of modern-day importation laws, the birds cannot be replaced.

The pair are one of the most popular and loved zoo exhibits and zoo communications manager Belinda Redman said there were concerns for the welfare of the second bird.

“It’s the first night it’s spent alone since arriving at the zoo and keepers are very worried about how it will cope,” she said.

She described the injured bird as “tame and docile”.

“Because it had lived its entire life at the zoo, it wasn’t afraid of the public,” she said.

“It used to stand quite close to the edge of the exhibit and I guess that was part of its charm.

“It’s managed to go 70 years without anything like this occurring and to know that this has happened is just unthinkable.”

Police yesterday arrested and charged four teenagers, aged between 17 and 19, from Broadview, Enfield, Payneham and Campbelltown with the aggravated ill-treatment of an animal.

They will appear in the Adelaide Youth Magistrates Court at a later date.

Police have urged any zoo visitors who witnessed the alleged attack to contact BankSA Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

In 2003, the zoo’s then acting director, Mark Craig, told the Herald Sun the birds had “an extraordinary lifespan for any animal, let alone a bird”. “If you look at the way they relate to each other there is a love ethos there – they’ve only got one good eye between them and they guide each other around,” Mr Craig said.

Zoo birdkeeper Nicholas Bishop said that it was impossible to know their precise ages and sexes.

“But I think he is the oldest in the world,” Mr Bishop said at the time.

“About 1936 is the last record I can find in the zoo’s history book of the greater flamingo arriving at the zoo and we have received international correspondence from other zoos saying they also believe he is the oldest in captivity.



You bloody good girl!
November 5, 2008, 9:13 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

How well done is the efforts of this young lady? I think she deserves a medal.

Auckland rape victim drove attacker to police station

Article from: NEWS.com.au

November 05, 2008 08:10am

A WOMAN who was raped in the back seat of a car drove her attacker to a police station after he fell asleep, a court in New Zealand was told.

Vipul Romik Sharma, 22, was found guilty of abduction and two counts of rape yesterday by a jury in Auckland District Court, the New Zealand Herald reports.

Sharma met the woman at a bar and drove her to a park where he raped her in the back seat of his car.

Afterwards, he let her drive before falling asleep in the passenger seat, so she drove him to a police station, the paper said.

“I almost couldn’t believe it when the call first came in. It’s a unique case,” said Detective Simon Welsh.

“She showed a lot of bravery and common sense. I have nothing but respect for what she has endured.”

Sharma will be sentenced in January.



Another reason to quit smoking
November 5, 2008, 9:04 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

Cigarette sets German bus ablaze, 20 dead

Article from: Agence France-Presse

From correspondents in Berlin

November 05, 2008 12:14pm

TWENTY people have been killed by a fire on a bus on a German motorway started by a passenger smoking in the toilet.

In Germany’s deadliest such incident in 16 years, the coach burst into flames at 8.40pm (6.40am AEDT) on a motorway just outside the northern city of Hanover.

The driver quickly pulled over, but in the panic to escape the inferno rapidly engulfing the bus only about a third of the mostly elderly passengers managed to get out.

Twelve people were injured, police said, several of whom were being treated for serious burns in a nearby hospital.

Police said the fire was caused by one of the passengers smoking in the bus toilet and didn’t put his cigarette out properly.

When smoke began pouring out of the toilet door another passenger opened it and flames shot out, setting the entire interior of the Mercedes coach on fire in seconds.

The local Hannoversche Allgemeine newspaper cited some of the 150 or so rescue workers as saying the fire was the worst they had ever seen and that some of the bodies were so badly charred they could not be identified.

It also cited police as saying that only those sitting in aisle seats were able to escape and that the positions of many of the bodies indicated they were trying to get out when they were overcome by smoke.

Television channel N24 cited a witness as saying that several walking frames had been recovered from the burnt-out vehicle.

The bus, operated by a Hanover firm, was said to be returning home from a day trip to the picturesque small town of Haltern am See in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

“I am deeply shaken by the dreadful fate of the victims of the fire,” Transport Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee said. “My sympathies go out to their loved ones.”

It was Germany’s worst coach accident for 16 years. In 1992, 21 people were killed and 35 injured in a crash in the Black Forest region of southwestern Germany.

In June 2007, 13 people were killed when a truck ploughed into a coach at full speed, sending it hurtling down an embankment before it landed on its roof off a motorway outside the central city of Halle.



Snakes in Australia are getting hungry
November 3, 2008, 8:50 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

I had to post this for my non-Australian readers. Please, come visit our country – see the parrot eating snakes and spiders. Not even dogs or cats are safe.

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Snake caught eating cocky

Monday, November 3, 2008

© The Cairns Post

Cindy Lane... A python eating a cockatoo at Clifton Beach on October 30, 2008.  Pic. Cindy Lane CC127969

MUST CREDIT: Cindy Lane... A python eating a cockatoo at Clifton Beach on October 30, 2008. Pic. Cindy Lane CC127969

LAST month, it was a spider chowing down on local birdlife that caused a media frenzy around the world.

Not to be outdone, a python has taken up the challenge with a hapless sulphur-crested cockatoo (bird) falling victim to its hungry jaws last Thursday night.

Artist and Clifton Beach resident Cindy Lane was painting in her studio around 8pm when she heard a “couple of loud squawks” coming from the bougainvillea tree in her backyard.

View more photos of the snake eating the huge cockatoo bird.

On closer inspection, she found the python coiling itself tightly around the bird high in the tree’s branches.

“I considered jumping in to save him, but his last breath was literally being squeezed from him as we approached,” she told The Cairns Post.

She said the python then took about two hours to complete his meal after “one false start” with another half hour to enjoy his spoils before moving on.

“It was difficult to watch but at the same time mesmerising,” Ms Lane said.

“It was just so clever how it used his upper coils to get the wings aligned so it could swallow the whole thing.”

Python feasts on pet cat

Saturday, March 1, 2008

A MICROCHIP implanted in a Cairns family’s missing cat helped them track down their pet – inside a 4m python.

The owner of the Siamese-Persian said her cat went missing on Wednesday night and when she searched for it the following morning, she instead found a python with a suspiciously looking bulge in its belly.

“My heart started to leap and I thought, ‘oh no, that’s it’,” the woman, who did not want to be named, said.

Wildlife rescue worker Michael Stevens took the python to Southside Veterinary Surgery at Woree, where vet Wade McAuley scanned it for the cat’s microchip and found a positive match.

“We did have him microchipped so that put our minds at rest, but it was still very sad,” the cat’s owner said.

The snake has since been released into the wild at the back of Edmonton.

A 5m python that stalked and killed a Kuranda family’s pet dog this week is also set for release
after vet and reptile expert Andrew Easton gave it a clean bill of health.

The snake, nicknamed Fluffy, created headlines when The Cairns Post revealed how it ate the Peric family’s dog - after pythons also ate their cat and guinea pigs.

“The snake is in a pretty healthy condition,” Dr Easton from Kuranda Veterinary Surgery said.

“We’ve had a feel over him and we had a look in his mouth to see whether there were any injuries from his recent escapade.

“The only potential problems are things like collars, but most of the time they’ll be passed right through.”

Dr Easton said it could take the snake two to four weeks to fully digest his latest meal.

“If everything goes fine with him, we’ll probably look over him once more before his release to make sure he has no diseases before he goes into the wild,” he said.

Queensland Parks and Wildlife northern division spokesman Scott Sullivan said the amethystine or scrub python was the largest of the Queensland python species.

Mr Sullivan said the largest authenticated specimen was recorded at 5.6m, weighing about 28kg.

Monster python eats pet

Sophia Browne

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

VIDEO AND PHOTO GALLERY: A Kuranda couple fears for their children’s safety after a 5m python devoured their dog in front of them, just weeks after other snakes killed their cat and guinea pig.

Daniel Peric said he now would not leave his two children, aged five and seven, alone in any part of the house, after the “enormous” python ate his silky terrier-cross chihuahua about 9pm on Monday.

“Actually watching it unfold before your eyes was pretty gut wrenching,” he said.

“We’d had the dog about five years, so it was part of the family.”

Mr Peric said in the weeks before, the family had found their cat’s body, which looked like something had attempted to swallow it and on Sunday a smaller python had eaten their pet guinea pig.

“When it happens once, you think it’s a one-off, but last night I thought “this is serious,” he said.

“We have ducted air-conditioning. Call it paranoia, but my big fear is that a snake will get in there.”

Australian Venom Zoo owner Stuart Douglas took the call from the distressed Peric family on Monday night and arrived to remove the scrub python within 20 minutes.

“They were very upset but they still had the decency to call us to come and get it,” Mr Douglas said.

“It was at the bottom of the veranda, they’d thrown chairs at it (the python) to try to stop it, but it had already eaten the animal.”

Mr Douglas said by the time he arrived, all that could be seen of the dog was its back legs and tail.

“It only took about 30 minutes to eat the dog, but it will be digesting it for two days,” he said.

Mr Douglas said pythons were amazing animals that belonged in the Far North but people needed to be aware that pets were potential prey.

“These pythons used to feed on wallabies but now they feed on cats and dogs in suburbia,” he said.

“This python actively stalked their dog.”

He said if anyone saw a large snake near their home they should call someone to remove it as soon as possible.

“There’s someone in every area of Queensland who will come around for a donation and basically volunteer to collect it.”

Mr Douglas said he would wait until the python had fully digested its prey before releasing it.

Snake’s wallaby meal

Thursday, February 28, 2008

WARNING! GRAPHIC IMAGES & VIDEO: Darren Cleland could not believe his eyes when he saw this monster python on the banks of the Barron River west of Cairns.

The former Cairns councillor was at his rural property at Bilwon last month when he heard a neighbour’s dog barking and rushed down to the water’s edge to find the snake devouring a full-size wallaby with a joey in its pouch.

He estimated the python was at least 5m long.

“We were more amazed than anything that a python could get its mouth around an animal of that size,” he told The Cairns Post last night.

“We’ve seen a few snakes but never anything this big.”

Mr Cleland said the experience was a good lesson for his children to be wary of all snakes.

“We figured if it could eat the wallaby, it could easily eat our five-year-old.”

Mr Cleland sent the images to The Cairns Post after it yesterday revealed how a 5m python swallowed the Peric family’s pet dog on Monday night.

Daniel Peric said he now would not leave his two children, aged five and seven, alone in any part of their Kuranda house.

The python was removed from the Peric’s home by Australian Venom Zoo owner Stuart Douglas.

It will be released back into the wild away from humans and roads in the next few days, after being checked by a reptile specialist and officers from Queensland Parks and Wildlife.

In the meantime the python, named Fluffy because of its appetite for furry animals, is curled up in a special room at the Venom Zoo while it digests its prey.

Mr Douglas said scrub pythons grew up to 8m in length and there was documentary evidence they could break a man’s arm or strangle an adult to death.

The Cairns Post had a huge response to yesterday’s story, with more than 20,000 page views of the article at www.cairns.com.au.

had a huge response to yesterday’s story, with more than 20,000 page views of the article at www.cairns.com.au.

More than 6000 people have already viewed our python picture gallery on the site.

Spider eats bird

Thursday, October 23, 2008

© The Cairns Post

THESE amazing images of a mammoth spider devouring a bird were taken in the backyard of an Atherton property, west of Cairns.

And the images, which are being cirulated via email worldwide, are real, according to wildlife experts.

See all the photos of the spider eating the bird

The photos, believed to have been taken earlier this week, show the spider clenching its legs around a lifeless bird trapped in a web.

Joel Shakespeare, the head spider keeper at NSW’s Australian Reptile Park, told ninemsn that the spider was a Golden Orb Weaver.

Another brutal wildlife meal

Monster python eats pet

Check out our insect gallery

“Normally they prey on large insects, it’s unusual to see one eating a bird,” he said.

Mr Shakepeare told ninemsn he had seen golden orb weaver spiders as big as a human hand but the northern species in tropical areas were known to grow larger.

Mr Shakespeare said the bird, a Chestnut-breasted Mannikin which appears frozen in an angel-like pose in the pictures, is likely to have flown into the web and got caught.

“It wouldn`t eat the whole bird,” he told ninemsn.

“It uses its venom to break down the bird for eating and what it leaves is a food parcel,” he said.

Queensland Museum’s Greg Czechura is reported ninemsn as saying cases of the Golden Orb Weaver eating small birds were “well known but rare”.

“It builds a very strong web,” he told ninemsn.

But he said the spider would not have attacked until the bird weakened due to its struggle to free its wings.

“The more they struggle, the more tangled up and exhausted they get and they go into stress.”

“If a spider gets a bird, it`s a very lucky spider,” Mr Czechura said.

Read our exclusive story about the photographer who took these amazing images and check out The Weekend Post tomorrow for our exclusive interview and more images.



Aussie iPods cheapest in the world
November 3, 2008, 8:36 am
Filed under: Weird News Stories

Well, at least theres some positives to our miserable dollar …

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iPod index reflects dive of Australian dollar

The Australian

November 03, 2008 12:00am

  • Australia cheapest place in world for iPods
  • Highlights dramatic fall of Aussie dollar
  • “iPod index” compares currencies

AUSTRALIA is the cheapest place in the world to buy an Apple iPod, according to a study to be released today, highlighting the dramatic fall in the Australian dollar in the past several months, The Australian reports.

CommSec will today release details of its “iPod index”, which measures the price of an 8GB iPod nano in 62 countries to compare currencies.

CommSec chief economist Craig James said Australia had jumped to the cheapest spot after being placed 14th cheapest in July. An 8GB iPod costs $US131.95.

In July, a 4GB iPod (then considered the entry-level product) cost $US181.50.

“It’s quite remarkable, we are the cheapest by a long way,” Mr James said.

“Our currency has fallen dramatically.”

Yup, we are the cheapest place to buy an iPod Nano in the world… If you don’t live here!

Lonski

It would be about 25 per cent cheaper for a British tourist to buy their iPod in Australia, rather than at home, Mr James said.

But while having an Australian dollar at US65c-67c was good news for manufacturers and other exporters as well as the tourism industry, Mr James said the iPod index shows the Australian dollar may have fallen too far too quickly.



Iceland for sale – minus Bjork
October 10, 2008, 3:15 pm
Filed under: Weird News Stories

Iceland for sale – minus Bjork

Article from: Reuters

October 10, 2008 09:41pm

GREAT scenery and wildlife but financial situation in need of repair – collect in person.

Iceland, which is going cap in hand to Russia for a €4 billion ($5.49 billion) loan to bail out its failed banks, was offered for sale as a wholesale lot on eBay on Friday.

Bidding started at 99 pence but had reached £10 million ($17.28 million) by mid-morning on Friday.

Globally renowned singer Bjork was “not included” in the sale, according to the notice, but there were nonetheless 26 anonymous bidders and 84 bids.

“Located in the mid-Atlantic ridge in the North Atlantic Ocean, Iceland will provide the winning bidder with – a habitable environment, Icelandic Horses and admittedly a somewhat sketchy financial situation,” the notice read.

Bidders’ questions included: “Do you offer volcano/earthquake insurance?”, “Is it possible that my payment will be frozen?”, and “Will you accept COD as a form of payment?”