Australia

Not that big, I'll have to see if I can dig it up, took a photo of a brownie crossing our farm track, which was built wide enough to get my truck down- and it had its head in the grass on one side of the gravel, and its tail in the grass on the other side...
and the truck was 2.4m wide on the tray...

This was further north on the Qld border mind you
 
I have a general question.

Borat does stupid interviews, tricking the celebrity. Norman Gunston did stupid interviews, tricking the celebrity. They are not the same but there are some similarities.


Was Norman Gunston the first character to do this or was there someone earlier from overseas that I don't know of? :)
 

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I have a general question.

Borat does stupid interviews, tricking the celebrity. Norman Gunston did stupid interviews, tricking the celebrity. They are not the same but there are some similarities.


Was Norman Gunston the first character to do this or was there someone earlier from overseas that I don't know of? :)

Wikipedia says, "The Gunston character was originally conceived by comedy writer Wendy Skelcher and first appeared as a minor character to appear in a single sketch in the second series of the cult Australian TV comedy series The Aunty Jack Show in 1973."

It doesn't mention any prior inspiration for the character.

And now, some badly dated Gunston in, er, song:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJu9chODs08

 
Bumper cloud of megabats wreaks havoc on Adelaide’s power network

With wingspans of up to one-metre, protected grey-headed flying foxes are causing multiple blackouts a week


Australia’s largest bat is making life difficult for Adelaide residents with a heaving colony of more than 25,000 plunging households into darkness 40 times so far this year.

The protected grey-headed flying fox – a member of the megabat family – first moved into Botanic Park in the heart of the city in 2010.

Since then the colony has grown steadily and it has often hit about 25,000 but there’s something a little different about the situation this year and it’s playing havoc with the power network.

Adelaide didn’t get its usual heatwaves this summer, meaning vastly more pups than usual survived. It’s these naive young bats, still on their L-plates when it comes to flying, that seem to be causing much of the trouble, an expert said.

“These young bats are leaving the colony on their first foraging runs, and they’re getting into strife on the power line infrastructure,” said Jason van Weenan, an ecologist with the South Australian government’s Green Adelaide program.

“It’s particularly noticeable this year because not only do we have a large colony at the moment (at the upper end of its historical range), but we also have a lot of young surviving so that’s unusual.”
 
Peak Australia

Snakes and lettuce: Australian couple find venomous snake in their Aldi fresh produce

After finding the baby pale-headed snake, Alexander White had a troubling thought: ‘What if the snake has come from something else?’


A Sydney couple received a fright when they discovered a rare venomous snake in a bag of supermarket lettuce – but recovered and later used the fresh produce in a salad wrap.

The juvenile pale-headed snake, Hoplocephalus bitorquatus, was tucked into a two-pack of cos lettuce which Alexander White and his partner, Amelie Neate, purchased from an Aldi supermarket in Sydney on Monday.

“It was moving around and flicking its little tongue out,” White said. “It was actually its tongue which let me know it wasn’t a giant worm. I would have been more comfortable with a worm, to be honest.”

...

“I have eaten the lettuce,” he said. ‘“I washed it thoroughly. There were a couple of things that I had determined to be snake poo but I washed that off and had a salad wrap today. People always say ‘wash your lettuce’ and I think I’ve been guilty in the past of not washing my vegetables, but I think the lesson from this is to always wash your lettuce.”
 
Good news, everyone!

Stowaway snake apparently found in Sydney Aldi lettuce bag is returned home to Queensland

A baby pale-headed snake thought to have hitched a ride from Queensland to Sydney in a bag of lettuce has returned home after a 2,000-kilometre round trip.

Sydney woman Lesley Kuhn claims her son found the venomous reptile wrapped around lettuce leaves, inside a packet she bought from a local Aldi supermarket.

A team from the New South Wales Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service (WIRES) drove the reptile nearly 1,000km in a "relay" to Toowoomba, to release it in the region where the lettuce was picked.

"Everything has a right to live and go back to where they belong," WIRES emergency responder Amy Wregg said.

"You get the haters that would rather see [a snake] chopped up in a million pieces.

"But he's a little hatchling that just got himself into a bit of mischief.

"He's venomous but he's not deadly so it's enough to make you sick but not kill you."
 

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