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Mum finds crocodile head outside Stafford chip shop
A mother and son were stunned when they stumbled across a crocodile’s head after leaving a Stafford chip shop.
Zoe Green made the discovery with her three-year-old son outside Sandon Road Fish Bar on Tuesday (November 16).
She contacted Stafford reptile shop Tails and Scales after finding the unusual item on the pavement.
A spokesman for the shop said: “It is in her garden. It is a genuine head and isn’t stuffed.
“It will probably be full of maggots and stinking by now which is why it’s outside!
“We offered to take it while it is being investigated but she is using it for her party piece this weekend.
“The offer still stands.”
The RSPCA are investigating.
Crocodile Used For Home Security
“We were doing a patrol and as we went by, they let us know it was there,” Police Constable David Melhuish told the Northern Territory News. “We were pretty surprised when we saw how big it was.”
Iowa Reptile Rescue hopes it will be rescued
It needs $2,500 to cover rent and food (rats and vegetables) for 80 homeless reptiles and amphibians.
Hello, my name is Jose. I’m a green iguana.
Adopt me!
Jose’s plea will soon need a few more exclamation points – unless his caretakers raise $2,500 by the end of the month.
The rough economy has taken its toll on Iowa Reptile Rescue, which is home to about 80 reptiles and amphibians that, for many reasons, are homeless.
Jason and Robin Argo started the rescue 2feet,” Jason Argo said.
The Argos need $2,500 by Nov. 27 to catch up on money owed for their lease and rats and vegetables that their homeless critters eat. They’ve raised more than $600 so far.
The rescue has between 60 and 100 animals at any given time, depending on demand and other factors. The Animal Rescue League, which does animal control work for the city of Des Moines, has an agreement with the Argos to place all wayward reptiles and amphibians with them.
The Argos use a two-week waiting period on all adoptions to be sure the creatures find the right home.
“Everybody wants to adopt, but we’re real picky,” Jason Argo said.
Zac Sadler, who manages another store in the mall, said he would hate to see the group leave the mall or close.
“They try really hard to do the right thing,” Sadler said. “It’s truly a good cause.”
Argo said they’ve found a lawyer who is willing to do free work to help the rescue become a not-for-profit organization. That would make it eligible for grants to make the rescue solvent, even in tough times, he said.
Boys steal reptiles from nature center, fulfill your childhood dream
Two brothers in Baltimore broke into a nature center and made off with an iguana, geckos, chameleons, turtles and a Madagascar hissing cockroach, the AP reports.
The boys are 11 and 14 and apparently not afraid of creepy creatures.
But do they fear the police?
They face juvenile charges including theft and breaking and entering. Right now they’re with their parents, and the reptiles are back at the Baltimore’s Carrie Murray Nature Center.
Aussie pair pack croc into car to save swimmers
SYDNEY — Two Australian men didn’t just run when they spotted a large crocodile at a popular swimming hole, they packed it into their car and took it away so it would not pose a danger to other bathers.
The men found the 3.2-metre (11-foot) saltwater predator about 10 kilometres (six miles) from their remote Aboriginal community of Gunbalanya in the tropical northern region known as Arnhem Land on Wednesday, police said.
“They took it back in the back of a Troopcarrier (four-wheel drive),” a Northern Territory police spokeswoman said on Friday.
The men left the animal at a relative’s home, where it sat lazily in a pool of water in the front yard overnight — with its jaws and legs securely bound — as they prepared to release it back into the wild.
“It appears that they knew what they were doing,” the spokeswoman said, adding that the animal was not harmed in any way.
The reptile was later released into the East Alligator River with the assistance of wildlife officials.
Australian authorities trap crocodiles in the country’s far north each year to reduce the likelihood of the deadly saltwater species finding their way to popular swimming locations.
“It’s a timely reminder that crocodiles do move around and can be found in most Top End waterways,” Parks and Wildlife Service acting chief district ranger Lincoln Wilson said in a statement.
Air Force Base ‘Gator Mascot’ Gets New Home
The Charleston Air Force Base was on lock down this week, not for a training exercise, but to relocate the base’s 12-foot mascot of the reptilian kind.
In retention pond on the Charleston Air Force lies the joint base’s alligator, named ‘Charlie.’
“He’s a very large alligator, he’s a over mature bull alligator,” says Terrance Leraber, the resources manager for the base. Charlie has called the pond home on the base for over 50 years, but he had to be moved–temporarily.
“Charlie will stay here while his pond is being enlarged probably for a couple of months and then we will move him back to his original home place,” says Leraber.
The base is doing some construction work near Charlie’s pond and wanted to protect the workers and their mascot from any unfortunate accidents.
“This was a first time experience for everybody involved including Charlie,” said Leraber.
The move went as expected, leaving Charlie with a new place to call home. “Untied him, release him. He swam off and appears to be perfectly alright,” Leraber says.