On kangaroo killing field, from horror to hope for Australian animals devastated by wildfires
Chris Barton has a spot of blood on the collar of the white shirt he wears underneath his veterinarian's scrubs. The 70-year-old holds a .22 caliber rifle he's been forced to turn on critically injured and suffering kangaroos. He wants to cry.
The Mallacoota golf course was a sanctuary for animals fleeing Australia's catastrophic bushfires, but it has become a killing field.
A mob of kangaroos had gathered on the fairway, the last patch of green grass left after fire ripped through the eastern Victoria town on New Year's Eve, destroying close to 100 homes and thousands of hectares of native habitat. Over 4,000 locals and tourists had to be evacuated by sea after the fires cut the one road in and out of Mallacoota.
Read more: https://edition.cnn.com/2020/01/09/australia/australia-fires-animals-mallacoota-intl-hnk/index.html

The Mallacoota golf course was a sanctuary for animals fleeing Australia's catastrophic bushfires, but it has become a killing field.
A mob of kangaroos had gathered on the fairway, the last patch of green grass left after fire ripped through the eastern Victoria town on New Year's Eve, destroying close to 100 homes and thousands of hectares of native habitat. Over 4,000 locals and tourists had to be evacuated by sea after the fires cut the one road in and out of Mallacoota.
Read more: https://edition.cnn.com/2020/01/09/australia/australia-fires-animals-mallacoota-intl-hnk/index.html

Comments
Post a Comment