English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I was just thinking about Steve and I found two ironic twists about his death. The first one that I came up with was that he put his heart into all of the animals (his passion in other words) and he died by having a sting ray's barb pierce him through his chest. The second twist was that he died filming a documentary called "Ocean's Most Deadliest". I've always loved steve and he's really going to be someone I miss. Does anyone else feel like they lost a close relative......poor Terri, Bindi and Bob....

2006-09-05 11:24:03 · 6 answers · asked by actressinthemaking2005 3 in Pets Reptiles

6 answers

Actually, I'm glad that he didnt die by means of venomous snake or a
crocs jaws. There are so many people that would have said "I told you
so." This way it was something that is usually assumed to be docile
that just happened to get frightened and be in the wrong spot. It
goes to show that when your time comes, whereever you are and whatever
your doing, your name will be called. Whether its a car accident, a
freak brain anurism, or a mosquito with west nile, something out there
is calling. There seems to be no reason or rhyme to this breath of
life extermination. Its not true that one gets what they deserve.
Children die that have had no time to do wrong, yet others who have
molested the children live long lives. One who has loved and respected
animals all of his life died doing what he loved yes, so its not quite
as tragic as it could have been had he died of something conventional
like a plane crash. But still, 2 young kids of his may never remember
what Crikey really means. Who is the person or thing that chooses our
time? Is it chosen before we are born? Is it chosen at all or is it
simply a roulette wheel of death? My old Aunt Ruth died last week at
99. That lady lived to see all sorts of unthinkable things. That
didnt bother me though because she was crazy old and had been "dying"
for quite some time. Steve though lived more in his 44 years than the
average person lives even if they do live to a hundred. Steve
understood what life was yet was not afraid to live it. In his
lifetime he took his fathers small reptile park and allowed it to
become the world famous Australian Zoo. He also did uncountable things
for modern herpetoculture as far as helping reptiles gain interest in
the general public. At the zoo i'm sure the crocodiles shed a tear,
as Steve will not only be missed by his family and millions of other
people, but also the many animals that he cared for.

2006-09-05 11:38:03 · answer #1 · answered by johndoe12 1 · 2 0

I can t say i feel like he was a relative of mine but it is a sad thing how it happened it reminded me of the grizzly man he also was passionate about wildlife up untill the point where the hungry bear ate him...and his girlfriend

2006-09-05 18:30:38 · answer #2 · answered by glass_city_hustla 4 · 1 0

Crikes! I will miss him, but I kind of always thought because he was doing such dangerous things he would die doing something normal like taking a shower.

2006-09-05 18:30:28 · answer #3 · answered by skippy 3 · 1 0

I know..I feel really bad 4 his wife and daughter..so sad:(

2006-09-05 18:26:30 · answer #4 · answered by Melissa T 2 · 1 0

i feel bad for his widow and those poor innocent babies that are gonna grow up without their dad .

2006-09-05 18:31:49 · answer #5 · answered by Mark 6 · 1 0

hay life moves on and just think he could have had his head bitten off in sted just move on

2006-09-05 18:27:36 · answer #6 · answered by cheese 1 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers