Ms Churchill, who lived in the Adelaide Hills for about 20 years, was
moving a herd of cows on a property near Heywood, in western Victoria,
when she saw the koala walking nearby. She assumed it was going from one
tree to the next.
“He was close but then he started running towards me and I thought I
better speed up (on the quad bike),” she said.
“But the more I sped up, the faster he got.
“I thought if I got further down the track, he would lose interest. I got to the end of the cows and couldn’t go any further so that’s when I bailed off the bike. They’ve got hard, sharp claws and I didn’t want to have him grabbing at my leg as I was on the bike.” Ms Churchill lost sight of the koala as she got off the bike but found it latched on to the rear tire. “He sat on the tire for a while and I didn’t want to upset him,” she said.
“I started herding the cows on foot and when I looked back, he had got
off the bike and was walking away.”
Ms Churchill said she was probably traveling at about 10km/h along the
muddy track when the koala was chasing her.
“They’re very active this time of year,” she said. “He was a gorgeous
koala - really, really cute.”
She said she had seen the same koala a couple of times and it had
followed her from a distance but it was the first time it had tried to
chase her.
“I thought if I got further down the track, he would lose interest. I got to the end of the cows and couldn’t go any further so that’s when I bailed off the bike. They’ve got hard, sharp claws and I didn’t want to have him grabbing at my leg as I was on the bike.” Ms Churchill lost sight of the koala as she got off the bike but found it latched on to the rear tire. “He sat on the tire for a while and I didn’t want to upset him,” she said.
No comments:
Post a Comment