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The Irwin clan. Me, Joy, Mum, Dad and Mandy. |
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Way, way back in February of 1962 Steve was
born right fair smack on his mother's 20th birthday. A birthday present she'll never forget. The umbilical
cord of their souls was never cut.
Lyn Irwin was a fully trained Maternity Nurse
so rehabilitation of wildlife was second nature to her. Steve's parents were teenage lovers and were married as
soon as Lyn turned 18. So for her it was all about raising wildlife and a family.
Bob Irwin (born c. 1939/1940 in Melbourne), Victoria,
Australia, is an Australian naturalist, animal conservationist, and a pioneering herpetologist who is also famous for his
conservation and husbandry work with apex predators and other reptiles. He was the founder of the Beerwah Reptile Park,
now the Australia Zoo.

Irwin was a successful plumber from Melbourne who,
in addition, had also spent time building sheds and houses. Bob Irwin's career in animal conservation officially began in
1970, when Irwin moved his family from Essendon, located west of Melbourne, Australia, to Queensland. Irwin had decided to
turn his love for animals from a hobby into a career and purchased four acres of land to construct a wildlife refuge. As a
builder, Irwin personally turned his hand to building and designing the Beerwah Reptile Park. Irwin dedicated so much time
to constructing the Reptile Park and the enclosures that for the first years in their new life of exhibiting native fauna,
the Irwins lived in an old RV caravan. Irwin would build a shed, and then the Irwin house, which the Irwin family and Bob
Irwin inhabit to this day
Bob Irwin married Lyn Irwin, a maternity nurse
who died in an automobile accident in 2000.
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Stephen Robert Irwin was born to Lyn and Bob Irwin in Victoria
in February 1962. Bob Irwin was a keen enthusiast of reptiles and moved his family to Queensland in 1970 to start a small
reptile park at Beerwah on the Sunshine Coast. Australia Zoo became a true family business, flourishing until 1991 when Bob
& Lyn retired, turning over management to their son, Steve.
Living in the Zoo, Steve grew up with animals of all kinds, taking
part in the animals daily feeding, care and maintenance. His 6th birthday present was what he had always wanted – his
very own scrub python! It was 3.6m (12ft) long and while most other children were opening cans of pet food for their cats
or dogs, Steve was out catching fish and hunting rodents to feed to his crocodiles and snakes.
Bob taught the young Steve everything there was to know about
reptiles – even teaching his nine-year-old how to jump in and catch crocodiles in the rivers of North Queensland at
night. This father and son’s proud boast is that every crocodile in their Zoo (the numbering some 100 animals) was either
caught by their bare hands or bred and raised in their Zoo.
As he grew older Steve followed in his father’s footsteps
and volunteered his services to the Queensland Governments East Coast Crocodile Management program which saw him spend years
living on his own in the mosquito infested creeks, rivers and mangroves of North Queensland catching huge crocodiles single-handed.
His record of successful catches is still staggering to this day.
Since 1991, Australia Zoo has flourished and expanded under Steve’s
guidance. In 1990 a chance reunion with his friend, television producer John Stainton, filming in the Zoo for a TV commercial,
gave Steve the opportunity to show his diverse animal talents to the world when they both took a punt and make the first documentary,
"The Crocodile Hunter" in 1992.
The tremendous success of this one program quickly encouraged
the making of more and so over the next 3 years, 10 one hour episodes were made and on television screens all over the world.
Steve has now filmed over 70 episodes of "The Crocodile Hunter", 53 episodes of "Croc Files", 43 episodes of “Croc Diaries”
and his next television series is called “The New Breed Vets” for release in 2005.
Steve has the greatest respect and understanding for all animals
– something that has been instilled into him by his family for all of his life – and he's proud to share his passion
with everyone who visits his Zoo and with his five hundred million viewers world-wide.
In June 1992, Steve married
Terri Raines from Oregon USA. They had met a few months earlier when Terri visited the Zoo whilst on holidays in Australia.
They now spend their lives together educating people everywhere to care for all of our world’s wildlife.
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- Born: 22 February 1962
- Birthplace: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- Died: 4 September 2006 (barbed by a stingray)
- Best Known As: "The Crocodile Hunter" on TV
Steve Irwin was the enthusiastic host of the TV wildlife show The Crocodile Hunter until he was killed
by a stingray in 2006. Irwin's on-screen antics with dangerous animals, and his Australian-accented cries of "Crikey!", made
him an international celebrity and spawned television specials, board games, action figures and a feature film, The Crocodile
Hunter: Collision Course (2002). Irwin grew up around wildlife at his parents' reptile park in Queensland, Australia.
An experienced trapper of crocodiles, he took over direction of the park in 1991 and renamed it the Australia Zoo. In 1992
he married Terri Raines, a cougar wrangler from the United States. The pair created The Crocodile Hunter TV show in
1992 and it became a hit on American cable television. Irwin and his wife were soon regulars on televisions worldwide, hosting
shows that blended their personal lives with wildlife education. Irwin's shows included Croc Files (2000), The Crocodile
Hunter Diaries (2002), Confessions of the Crocodile Hunter (2004), and New Breed Vets (2006). On 4 September
2006 he was killed by a stingray barb to the chest while swimming with a cameraman near Port Douglas, Australia, where he
was filming a documentary titled Ocean's Deadliest.
Irwin had two children with his wife Terri: Bindi Sue (b. 1998) and Robert (b. 2003).... In 2004 Irwin was
criticized for feeding crocodiles at his wildlife park while holding his infant son Robert; Irwin was unapologetic and proclaimed
that his child was never in danger.
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Renowned environmentalist pulled
barb from heart before death
Australia - Steve Irwin died doing what
he loved best, getting too close to one of the dangerous animals he dedicated his life to protecting with an irrepressible,
effervescent personality that propelled him to global fame as television’s “Crocodile Hunter.”
The 44-year-old
Irwin’s heart was pierced by the serrated, poisonous spine of a stingray as he swam with the creature Monday Sept.
4 2006 while shooting a new TV show on the Great Barrier Reef.
Global
mourning
News of Irwin’s
death reverberated around the world, where he won popularity with millions as the man who regularly leaped on the back of
huge crocodiles and grabbed deadly snakes by the tail.
“Crikey!”
was his catch phrase, repeated whenever there was a close call — or just about any other event — during his TV
programs, delivered with a broad Australian twang, mile-a-minute delivery and big arm gestures.
Steve Irwin’s sudden, untimely
and freakish death was a shock to fans around the world. “It’s a huge loss to Australia.”
Conservationists
said all the world would feel the loss of Irwin, who turned a childhood love of snakes and lizards and knowledge learned at
his parents’ side into a message of wildlife preservation that reached a television audience that reportedly exceeded
200 million.
Jack Hanna said on Good Morning America
"He was probably one of the most knowledgeable reptile people in the entire world."
Mourners in Australia leaving flowers
at the gates of his zoo are dwarfed by an enormous picture of Irwin and a slightly smaller croc. In an era of Botox
and reality-show participants constantly blaming the editing, we want at least one person to be, in reality, as large, as
wild, as yelly and as crocodile-adoring as he is in our living rooms.

He's an ordinary guy, and he wants
to be remembered as an ordinary bloke.
Steve's wife, Terri, and the couple's
two children - Bindi, eight, and Bob, two - were coping "quite well.
Terri is very, very strong,. She's
having a lot of sad moments obviously, but she's putting on a brave face for the kids' sake.
Donations have flooded into Mr Irwin's
charity Wildlife Warriors, while flowers, cards and trademark khaki shirts have been left at the Australian Zoo he ran.
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