THE CROCODILES OF LAKE
MURRAY
Adrian Geyle (Published in Una Voce June 1998, page 16)
Lake Murray is a Shangri-la for crocodiles and water snakes. Fish
and freshwater turtles abounded too when I was there in the early
50s, and the local Suki people lived well on fresh food the lake
provided, and on sago from the surrounding swamps. Lake Murray is
over 60km long, connected by the short Herbert River to the larger
Strickland which flows fast into the mighty Fly (map in March 1998
issue, p13, shows location). Sometimes the Herbert would bring water
back into the lake, when either the Fly or the Strickland was in
flood. When both these big rivers ran high the level of the lake
would rise considerably.
A supply vessel used to bring people and cargo to our Lake Murray
patrol post at Mava and to the Unevangelised Fields Mission base
about 30km down the lake every three to four months. For a few short
months a Qantas Catalina flying boat landed once a fortnight with a
load of repatriated labourers. These were men returning to their
villages after completing two-year contracts with oil search
companies, on copra and palm oil plantations, and for the government
administration. The plane would land pretty much on schedule, and
tie up at a buoy far out from the station where the water was deeper
and clear of reeds. Our station canoes would collect these men and
bring them ashore, under paddle-power. (We had no outboard motors in
those early postwar days at Lake Murray where the only internal
combustion item was a Briggs and Stratton battery charger - a
cantankerous one at that.)
On plane days I would get out to the buoy early to be ready to
assist in the tying up of the ex-WW2 workhorse, the Catalina, and
always took my single-shot Lithgow rifle to pass the time when the
plane was late. Crocs would surface a short distance from the
stationary canoes and it was a bit of a worry (to me, if not the
locals!) sitting there on the glassy surface being eyed-off by these
semi-submerged saurians. There were monsters among them which could
overturn canoes. One four-metre giant came up onto the grass near
our patrol post’s hospital one night and was shot by spotlight by
the police night guard. Another came up under the house my OIC and I
lived in - it was after our chooks. At least during daylight hours
they preferred to remain in the lake Their eyes and the ends of
their snouts could be seen as they eyed us, out there on the placid
water.
One slug which I fired at a pair of eyes about 50m away seemed to
skip off the water, and I was surprised to see a leg rise into the
air as the animal turned on its side and sank slowly out of sight.
There was the usual excitement among the paddlers when a shot was
fired - whether it hit its mark or missed. I assumed I’d missed
because no-one said I’d hit the croc ... funny though, the way the
leg lifted and then scarcely moved as it disappeared below the
surface. Three days later a large village canoe came in to the
station towing the bloated body of a 3m crocodile. It was found
floating among reeds, out along the edge of the ‘airstrip’ not far
from where we sat waiting for the plane to arrive. It was mine, they
said, I’d shot it, no doubt about it. There were no holes or cuts in
the skin, much as we scrutinised the carcase. A crocodile’s ears are
just narrow slits along the side of the head, and here we found a
very slight abrasion to the skin, just a few millimetres in. I was
not convinced that the bullet entered there, and rather illogically
demonstrated the toughness of a croc’s skull by firing a .22 long
rifle bullet into the forehead of the skull. It flattened out like a
five cent piece. We cut the skull wide open with an axe - and there
was the lead slug, almost unmarked. It had entered through the ear
alright and apparently caused instant death as the croc sank without
any violent reaction whatsoever. There had been no shouts of “Oi
pidia, Taubada, oi pidia vadain,” (You shot it Taubada, you shot
it), just a lot of laughter at the way the croc’s leg lifted and
slowly disappeared like a nonchalant salute!
A dance was organised for some reason - it was not just an excuse to
eat the crocodile - and after dark the drums were still beating to
give unison to the stamp of feet and the dirge-like chanting of the
dancers. As the ‘big white hunter’ guest, I had pride of place in a
deckchair in front of the dancers, alongside several village elders
and in the light of a single pressure lamp hung on a tree. As guest
of honour I was offered a choice bit of cooked crocodile, the
section where the body becomes tail - and it stank to high heaven.
It was cooked alright, but it was rotten. After three days dead in
the tepid water of Lake Murray any animal would be rotten! To refuse
the offering would have been downright rude. I put it - a sizeable
chunk of the grey, rank stuff - to my mouth as if to take a bite.
The lamp light was pretty dim and in a shadow from some standing
people I kept up the pretence of munching away on the ‘treat’. The
gesture seemed to suffice as no-one asked me if I liked it or if I
wanted another piece, maybe from a ‘wing’ or the ‘breast’! My little
dog Woe was hanging around and I coaxed him near, pushing him and
the chunk of putrid meat under my chair when no-one appeared to be
looking. To my surprise he stayed there, helping me to solve the
problem of what to do - as long as he didn’t throw up in front of my
seated hosts.
Sacrificing himself on the altar of loyalty, he cleaned it up, bone
and all. Next day I was okay, but my dog was crook. He had broken
out in little white pustules all over his tender belly. Being the
brave little stalwart that he was, always nearby to protect his
master, he rallied - but with somewhat of a jaundiced look in his
eye. He got over it - and I promised him I’d never accept another
piece of cooked or uncooked crocodile meat again.