bigrich wrote:this reminds me of a fella i knew who hit a kookaburra in his BA XR6 falcon . he got to work and it was stuck in the grill. he went to remove it and it tried to bite him ! more than still alive , after we gave it some room , it extracted itself and flew off !
trekin wrote:bigrich wrote:this reminds me of a fella i knew who hit a kookaburra in his BA XR6 falcon . he got to work and it was stuck in the grill. he went to remove it and it tried to bite him ! more than still alive , after we gave it some room , it extracted itself and flew off !
Hit a flock of sulphur crests at well over the speed limit, in my younger days, with my HQ SS Monaro, the road looked like pillow fight night at an all girls boarding school.
Skinna wrote:trekin wrote:bigrich wrote:this reminds me of a fella i knew who hit a kookaburra in his BA XR6 falcon . he got to work and it was stuck in the grill. he went to remove it and it tried to bite him ! more than still alive , after we gave it some room , it extracted itself and flew off !
Hit a flock of sulphur crests at well over the speed limit, in my younger days, with my HQ SS Monaro, the road looked like pillow fight night at an all girls boarding school.
Haha...i can imagine that one Trekkin...the view in the rearview mirror would've been a ripper...!
In fact, come to think of it, ive had that feathery pillow fight effect from a single feral pigeon once.
It was when a 32 grainer i launched at only 80 yds from my Finnish made 204 launcher, suddenly stopped to greet the pigeon. It was kind of like what i imagine this quantum physics stuff looks like where particles of matter appear, disappear & change form all in squilli-seconds.
trekin wrote:bigrich wrote:this reminds me of a fella i knew who hit a kookaburra in his BA XR6 falcon . he got to work and it was stuck in the grill. he went to remove it and it tried to bite him ! more than still alive , after we gave it some room , it extracted itself and flew off !
Hit a flock of sulphur crests at well over the speed limit, in my younger days, with my HQ SS Monaro, the road looked like pillow fight night at an all girls boarding school.
Bugman wrote:Glad it wasn't me. Apart from the odd roo, and wallaby, the scourge up may way is bloody brush turkeys, and I can tell you they can cause some serious damage.
Blr243 wrote:Can a wombat weight 25 kg? I never seen one. Can somebody please do some maths and calculate the force of 25 kg at 100 kph. Maybe a mobile wheel alignment specialist should set up in high wombat areas ...he could sell drinks and hot dogs too
Blr243 wrote:Can a wombat weight 25 kg? I never seen one. Can somebody please do some maths and calculate the force of 25 kg at 100 kph. Maybe a mobile wheel alignment specialist should set up in high wombat areas ...he could sell drinks and hot dogs too
bigrich wrote: hotted up '67 vc valiant with a 318
womble wrote:I’d rather hit a cow than a wombat
Preferably niether, but cows bounce. Wombats are immovable objects
womble wrote:I’d rather hit a cow than a wombat
Preferably niether, but cows bounce. Wombats are immovable objects
womble wrote:You have obviously never driven behind a road train through the night
eddievic wrote:hahaha i see what you did there trekkin.
Sad for the driver and passengers in that situation.
trekin wrote:eddievic wrote:hahaha i see what you did there trekkin.
Sad for the driver and passengers in that situation.
He can laugh and joke about it now, 30 odd years later. He's a good mate and was a workcolleague ATT, and I was the passenger. Have witnessed cow hits too many times in the 40 plus years of driving the back roads, hiways and byways of centeral and western QLD. The last one was just before Xmas, last year, when a cow took out a ute right at the 80k sign on the edge of our little village. The driver, a young girl, was pronounced at the scene.
bigrich wrote:trekin wrote:eddievic wrote:hahaha i see what you did there trekkin.
Sad for the driver and passengers in that situation.
He can laugh and joke about it now, 30 odd years later. He's a good mate and was a workcolleague ATT, and I was the passenger. Have witnessed cow hits too many times in the 40 plus years of driving the back roads, hiways and byways of centeral and western QLD. The last one was just before Xmas, last year, when a cow took out a ute right at the 80k sign on the edge of our little village. The driver, a young girl, was pronounced at the scene.
were all these animal hits at night time trekkin' ?