the_camera_poser wrote:Tasmania has a long history, from the olde convict days, of consuming hiking buddies
Spygirl wrote:I was thinking about this yesterday as I remember coming across a tasty looking yabbie near Lake Vera a few weeks ago. ...
.. Or I think it was a yabbie.
Just ensure you dont get lost and carry some spare food ,epirb,AND DONT GET LOST in the first place
And on it goes.WALLABIES are hopping into Tasmania's opium poppy fields and getting high.
The revelation has also solved what some growers say has spurred a campfire legend about mysterious crop circles which appear in the state's poppy paddocks.
the_camera_poser wrote:Or, to quote a famous Aussie- "You can eat it, but it tastes like poo!"
imdb wrote: [a guana is sizzling over a fire. Sue looks ill]
Michael J. "Crocodile" Dundee: How do you like your guana? Medium? Well done?
Sue Charlton: You don't really expect me to eat that?
Michael J. "Crocodile" Dundee: Yeah, its great. Yeah, try some of these yams, try the grubs and the sugar ants. Just bite the end off, they're really sweet. Black fellas love 'em.
[Sue tentatively tries a yam]
Sue Charlton: What about you, aren't you having any?
Michael J. "Crocodile" Dundee: Me?
[Mick starts working on a tin with his knife]
Michael J. "Crocodile" Dundee: ...Well, you can live on it, but it taste like *&%$#!.
cjhfield wrote:Or this one:
"Sue Charlton: That croc was going to eat me alive.
Mick 'Crocodile' Dundee: Oh, I wouldn't hold that against him. Thought crossed my mind once or twice."
Chris
scavenger wrote:'guana' sizzling over the fire'?
I've heard of guano, and I've eaten goanna - is guana some bizarre hybrid of the two?
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