Now that you put it like that, it's starting to sound appealingMacca81 wrote: i think adam would do quite well down a little hole tho...

Now that you put it like that, it's starting to sound appealingMacca81 wrote: i think adam would do quite well down a little hole tho...
Brett wrote: As for caving it is generally a petite person's sport.
flyfisher wrote:Fortunately our tigers and copperheads are almost friendly by comparison--I have been so close ,so many times and have never had one actually strike at me.
They flatten heads like cobras and tigers stand up ,but mostly in defence , and usually they just like to get away.
scavenger wrote: And DON'T talk about spiders! Especially huntsmen in cars! There's nothing worse than flicking down the sun visor to find that you've flicked a saucer sized huntsman into your own lap . . .
Area54 wrote:Don't know if you get them in Tas, but up here we get the Golden Orb spider, beautiful spider to look and brilliant colouring . . . often as big as the palm of your hand (leg to leg) with an abdomen the size of a thumb nail.
Area54 wrote:That's similar scavenger, imagine the abdomen twice as large (we grow 'em big here in QLD) and it's enough to put the fear of Shelob into you!
the_camera_poser wrote:Have you moved here yet?
October 20, 2009 07:08am
TASMANIA Police have used blood taken from a leech to match DNA eight years after an aggravated robbery.
In what is believed to have been a world first, police found the engorged leech about an hour after the crime.
Peter Alec Cannon, 54, of Lalla Rd, Karoola, north of Launceston, pleaded guilty in court yesterday to an aggravated armed robbery committed on September 28, 2001.
Detective Inspector Mick Johnston said he had never heard of a leech being involved in a crime scene before.
"It is the oddest way of convicting anyone I have ever been involved in," the 25-year police veteran said.
"I have not been able to find any similar cases anywhere in the world -- nothing like this at all."
Det-Insp Johnston said the leech was the only thing found during a full forensic investigation.
"It was the only evidence we found, and as there was no evidence of any leech bites from the victim or the police present we thought it was a good chance to have come from one of the offenders," he said.
"We took it from the scene because it didn't belong there."
In denying a defence claim it was a weak case, Crown prosecutor John Ransom said: "The leech was found next to the safe and it had this man's blood in it."
He said Cannon and another man, who has not been caught, went to the home of Fay Olson, 71, near Lilydale about 4pm.
Both men were wearing black hoods and were armed with sticks when they confronted Mrs Olson.
"They poked me with a stick and forced me inside and asked to know the location of firearms," she said in a statement.
The men ransacked the house and when she went towards the phone the other man ripped the handset off the cord.
They stole $500 from the safe as well as $50 from her handbag which they stuffed in a pillow slip.
The men tied her up and put a belt around her ankles.
Mr Ransom said Senior Constable Nathan Slater had located the leech next to the bed and handed it to Det-Insp Johnston when making a forensic examination of the scene.
A DNA profile was taken from blood in the leech.
In 2008, when Cannon was charged with drug offences, police took a further DNA profile and found a match.
Mr Ransom said the chances of the DNA belonging to someone were one in a hundred million.
In a subsequent video interview in May 2009, Cannon had made no admissions.
He described Cannon as the less aggressive of the two men.
Defence counsel John Oxley said Cannon's guilty plea had come in spite of the "relatively weak case" by the Crown.
"There was very limited other evidence and no witnesses identified the accused's face," he said.
Mr Oxley said Cannon had been plagued with guilt as a result of his conduct.
"He pleaded guilty in the hope that he can move on," he said.
He asked Chief Justice Ewan Crawford to take into account the plea of guilty, given the strength of the Crown case.
Mr Ransom denied Mr Oxley's claim it was a weak case.
"It was a reasonable hypothesis consistent with the facts," he said.
Justice Crawford remanded Cannon in custody for sentence on Friday at 2.15pm.
In 2007, a national criminal investigation DNA database known as CrimTrac gave police the chance to match DNA profiles across Australia.
The new system enabled DNA profiles dating from before the 2001 Forensic Procedures Act to be used.
In 2007, Tasmania Police had a list of 63 unsolved crimes it was going to check against the national database.
Det-Inspector Johnston said there had been other cases where offenders were retrospectively charged as a result of DNA evidence but nothing as unusual as this.
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Jellybean wrote:...We did a quick walk in Ku-ring-gai Chase NP (northern beaches of Sydney) – along Resolute Track and West Head Track visiting Resolute Beach, Great Mackerel Beach and West Head Beach and return.
johnw wrote: I'm surprised that you managed to find any leeches around there... I've usually found it too dry that you'd expect them.
Yes, we made a point of carrying that when we were in Tassie!Top strength DEET try "Bushman80% "on the legs for any trip in our sneaky leechy country,works a treat
corvus
I couldn't believe the mess it made when left to feed unnoticed! If I'm expecting them I check frequently and flick them off as soon as I see them! Definitely my biggest (and most itchy! aargh!) leech bite ever.thats a good effort, they dont usuallt get a chance to hang around long enuf to make that much of a mess! lucky lil bugger!
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