
Pixabay / Pexels
I don’t find too many crocodiles in my life. Really, the only times I’ve seen them is when I’m fishing in the Florida Everglades or vacationing in Panama or Costa Rica. But they place fear in my heart in ways that an alligator has never been able to.
Crocs will swim in the middle of a crowd and choose an easy meal as it is nothing. They will make becins feeding the animals that come to the water’s edge to have a drink. They are stealthy predators, but are not against working hard to eat. So when a healthy snack like this shark just falls on a coconut’s lap, this shark is eaten 100% without remorse.
This Australian woman was fishing on Cardwell Beach in the far north of Queensland News Australia. He said he couldn’t get the shark back in the water. Apparently his plan was to drop it until the shark re-entered. But this huge 13-foot crocodile saw easy food and the rest was history. Just warning, she uses desecration in this video, but she’s Australian, so it’s pretty funny.
It looks like the video has slowed down a bit for some reason. At first, I thought the narrator seemed wasted, but I think they only slowed down the YouTube video to 9.9 times the normal speed. He heard her say “Look at this monster … saints, I just caught a shark, which I couldn’t get back into the water because this guy was coming, and now he’s going to come in to eat it and I’m going to myself. Oh, sir, it’s like one, two, three … I can see like four meters and it still has a tail in the water. I’ve never been so shaken in my whole life. “
In this video I have to give him the respect for being a full Australian. He gets to use desecration in such a silky and gentle way that only Australians are able to do it. Their culture is a giant master class in the use of desecration and I am eternally impressed.