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And ah, she's really enjoying that.
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She loves those sweet potato.
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Sweet potato is like chocolate for wombats.
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We're the Irwins.
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And this is Australia Zoo.
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Our dad Steve built this zoo
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to protect our world'S wildlife.
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Today we strive to carry on his mission.
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So come with us, this is Wild Times.
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This is Acco.
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He is the largest saltwater crocodile at Australia Zoo
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and at 16 feet in length and nearly half a ton,
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he is a spectacular animal.
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Crocs have been on the planet for over 200 million years.
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They are dinosaurs.
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If you look at him, he's built like a torpedo,
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not like a greyhound.
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So he's got these little legs, gigantic body,
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he's not designed as a terrestrial predator.
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He's designed for in the water and at the water's edge.
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Top speed, half his body is tail,
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he can go nearly as fast as a dolphin.
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Acco's got a really big head
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and these crocs can have over 3,000 pounds per square inch
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of closing jaw pressure, so that means anything they catch
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basically just explodes on impact.
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When they hatch, they're seven inches long.
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They're tiny.
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When you're a little crocodile,
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everything would want to eat you,
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but once they get up to this size,
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the only real threat that they would have
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would be from other big male crocodiles.
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They are just the ultimate hunting machine
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and I just love them.
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Crocodiles could probably live
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well up and over 60, 70 years.
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He's probably a really old crocodile
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and he's probably seen a lot in his day.
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Oh yeah, you think it's gonna hit?
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This rain?
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(Stella whining)
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Hey Robert, how's it goin'?
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Oh, I'm doin' great, thanks.
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I'm just walking Stella, who's deciding to go this way.
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Oh, do you have a minute
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to answer some questions?
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Yeah, I think so.
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What do you think Stella?
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What's the first animal
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you fell in love with?
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I think the first animal that I fell in love with was
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Jenny, the Burmese python.
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What's one misconception
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people have about reptiles?
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They're not all trying to eat you.
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What's your favorite band?
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I like Ed Sheeran.
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Nice, what's your favorite snack?
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Ooh, I like rice, a bit of vegetables.
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What do people not know about Australia?
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It's closer than you think.
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Yeah, it looks like
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the rain's getting worse.
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Who got you into photography?
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My dad.
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Do you have a favorite photo
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you've ever taken?
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Well, it was really unfortunate, Sudan,
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the last male northern white rhino,
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unfortunately passed away
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but it was a real privilege to photograph him.
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That was probably my favorite photo.
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Do you have a favorite camera?
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I shoot Canon so the 1D X--
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(thunder booming)
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Okay, we gotta stop.
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Come on guys!
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(Stella whining)
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Guess we only got to eight.
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I love him, oh, these guys are so cute.
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(mumbles) animal, he's chosen you.
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(jazzy upbeat music)
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We're here with another adorable Australian animal.
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We'd like you to meet, Kato.
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Hi Kato.
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- We love Kato. - Hi Kato.
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Kato is a wombat.
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We absolutely love her.
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She is so cute.
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And Kato is currently about 14 years old at the moment.
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For a wild wombat that's pretty much as old as they get,
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14, 15 years, but in captivity
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they could live well over 20 years.
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Yeah.
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So, they're beautiful animals
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and ah, she's really enjoying that.
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She loves those sweet potato.
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Sweet potato is like chocolate for wombats,
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which is hilarious.
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But wombats are really interesting
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because they're great diggers.
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They actually dig their very own burrows in the wild.
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So Kato here is really sandy.
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She has sand all through that thick tough fur
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and she is really, really cute.
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I think that's quite unusual with these guys,
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that you definitely wouldn't expect,
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is they can actually run at 25 miles per hour.
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Isn't that amazing?
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So this little kind of,
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looks like a giant guinea pig almost--
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She's like a square with legs.
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But they can run really, really fast.
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It's amazing and you can see this really hard,
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it's kinda like this hard plate there,
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that's right on their bottom
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and what that is, that sort
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of acts as a shield for predators.
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So what they would do if a predator were chasing them,
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they'd burrow down into their little burrow
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and then they can actually press this up
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and it would definitely be a pretty good deterrent for a predator.
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There is no way to get through that.
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It's just this big wall.
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- Wall. - Yeah, exactly.
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And these guys love walking
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all throughout Australia Zoo.
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We kinda let them do their own thing,
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so they can go and meet our visitors
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and they can have a look around the zoo
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and they have little tiny legs
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so if they get tired at any point
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we wheelbarrow them back to their homes.
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We're really lucky to spend time with Kato.
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She'll be right.
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What does she'll be right mean?
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She'll be right.
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She'll be right.
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Well, it means pretty much what it says,
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she'll be right, everything's gonna be okay.
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Yes.
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All is well.
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If she is everything, it means just what it says.
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She is everything.
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Woman's empowerment.
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The rhino is charging at me.
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She'll be right.
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She'll be right.
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Next week on Wild Times.
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Now we are joined by a very beautiful friend.
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Robert, who have we got?
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This is Queto, and Queto, hey mate,
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he's a gorgeous blue and gold macaw.
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Isn't he amazing?
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(jazzy upbeat music)