![]() A peculiar silver cactus ring.Īwarded for completing 50 quests in the Lava Caverns. Was found buried under rubble.Īwarded for completing 50 quests in the Sandy Plains. A relic encased in primeval ice.Īwarded for completing 50 quests in the Flooded Forest. Made from Spiritwood Branches.Īwarded for completing 50 quests in the Frost Islands. Depicts the two serpents leading the Rampage.ĭefeat Thunder Serpent Narwa in Hub questĪ souvenir from the Guild for completing many low rank quests.Ĭomplete all LR quests in Hub and VillageĪ souvenir from the Guild for completing many Rampage quests.Īwarded for completing 50 quests in the Shrine Ruins. Received upon defeating Ibushi and Narawa. Its blade is riddled with battle scars.Ī hanging scroll from Master Hojo, depicting your victory over Wind Serpent Ibushi. Granted for banishing an Apex in the Rampage. This blade has led Kamura for generations. His passionate family continue to strive to achieve all of the goals Steve hoped to attain.A trinket given to new hunters who have proved themselves capable.Ī prize for vanquishing Magnamalo. Tragically, Steve passed two months later. In July 2006, Steve and Terri set out a ten-year business plan for their beloved zoo. Steve was incredibly proud of his children and often said if he was to be remembered for anything, he hoped that it was for being a good dad. ![]() He instilled in them the need to treat every living being with kindness. Steve treasured every opportunity to share his love for wildlife with his children, Bindi and Robert. Steve’s message of “Conservation Through Exciting Education” is achieved everyday within the zoo. Re-naming it ‘Australia Zoo’ in 1998, their vision for the world’s best zoo was coming to fruition. Steve and Terri worked tirelessly to improve and expand the wildlife park. The TV series became an internationally broadcast wildlife documentary hit, which Steve hosted with wife, Terri. The show was so successful that it turned into a series and The Crocodile Hunter was born. Instead of a honeymoon, the couple embarked on filming a wildlife documentary while relocating a problem crocodile in far north Queensland. On June 4, 1992, they were married in Eugene, Oregon. Two days later, he met Terri Raines, a visiting tourist. Steve took over managing the park on October 4, 1991. Steve developed crocodile capture and management techniques that are now utilised with crocodilians around the world. He did all this with the company of his little dog, Sui. ![]() Here he worked countless hours with his best mate, Wes Mannion, caring for the wildlife and maintaining the grounds.Īs Steve’s love for crocodiles grew, he spent months on end living in the most remote areas of far north Queensland catching problem crocodiles for the Queensland Government. This was Steve’s home and the place he loved the most. He always had an uncanny sixth sense when it came to wildlife and spent his life honing that skill.īy 1980, the wildlife park was re-named the ‘Queensland Reptile and Fauna Park’. He caught his first venomous snake (a common brown) at the tender age of six and would often arrive late to school after convincing his mother to pull over so he could rescue a lizard off the road.īy the time he was nine-years-old, Steve was helping catch small problem crocodiles, hanging around boat ramps, by jumping on them in the water and wrestling them back into the dinghy. Steve grew up loving all wildlife, especially reptiles. ![]() His parents moved their family to Beerwah, Queensland, and opened the ‘Beerwah Reptile Park’ in 1970. Stephen Robert Irwin was born on February 22, 1962, in Upper Ferntree Gully, Victoria. Crikey! Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin wowed audiences by the millions! ![]()
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