Wild Facts About Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter

Wild Facts About Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter

He Was The Best Zookeeper

Steve Irwin was famous for wrestling crocodiles, handling snakes, and educating the world on different animals. Yet despite his global recognition, few people know these zany facts about the world's favorite zookeeper.

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1. His Parents Loved Dangerous Animals

Steve Irwin entered the animal kingdom on February 22, 1962, in Melbourne's leafy suburbs—and he was practically into the jungle. His mother, Lyn, rehabilitated wildlife while his father, Bob, collected venomous reptiles as a plumber-turned-herpetologist. But Irwin would take his parents' passion to extremes.

Gettyimages - 1129399, Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin Justin Sullivan, Getty Images

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2. He Smuggled Snakes Onto Buses

Irwin was a thrill-seeker from the beginning. He ignored his father's warnings about venomous reptiles, hunting them with reckless abandon. Once, he stashed a red-bellied black snake in a bus driver's cooler for the ride home. The other passengers had no idea they were sharing their commute with one of Australia's most dangerous serpents.

His sixth birthday brought his own slithering surprise.

Gettyimages - 1129403, Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin Justin Sullivan, Getty Images

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3. He Got A Pet Python

While other kids unwrapped toy cars and dolls on their birthdays, Irwin's parents gave him a different kind of present. For his sixth birthday, little Irwin received a 12-foot scrub python. And that was just the first in his animal kingdom. That same year, he caught his first venomous snake and regularly had his mother pull over so that he could save lizards from getting run over.

Soon his backyard would become a zoo.

File:Australian scrub python (Morelia kinghorni), hatchling.jpgheosemys (Bill Hughes), Wikimedia Commons

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4. His Family Relocated To Queensland

In 1970, eight-year-old Irwin traded Melbourne for Queensland's Sunshine Coast. He bounced between Landsborough State School and Caloundra State High, but classroom walls couldn't contain him. The real education happened outside, where dangerous creatures lurked in every shadow.

His father had bigger plans brewing.

Gettyimages - 71783936, Lisa Maree Williams, Getty Images

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5. His Dad Built A Reptile Kingdom

When Irwin was eight, his father constructed the Beerwah Reptile Park with his own hands. That means that little Irwin grew up in close proximity to crocodiles, pythons, and venomous snakes that most people only see on nature shows—or in their nightmares. But, even as a tyke, he wasn't afraid of even the most dangerous animals.

Gettyimages - 540125517, Bob Irwin, father of Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin who was killed by a stingray, The AGE, Getty Images

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6. He Wrestled Crocodiles At Nine

Given his proximity to and evident love for dangerous animals, Irwin's father taught him reptile behavior from toddlerhood. So, by the time that Irwin was nine, he was already grappling with crocodiles. The prehistoric predator thrashed and snapped, but the boy held firm, planting the seeds of a career that would mesmerize millions.

Gettyimages - 77794596, Australia Zoo Imagery BEERWAH, AUSTRALIA - SEPTEMBER 16: Steve Irwin poses with a crocodile at Australia Zoo September 16, 2006 in Beerwah, Australia. Handout, Getty Images

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7. He Became A Tiny Crocodile Wrangler

Even at the tender age of nine, Irwin demonstrated such a knack for wrestling crocs that he made a job of it. The future world famous zookeeper spent his days hunting problem crocodiles near boat ramps. Brave as ever, he'd leap from dinghies onto unsuspecting reptiles, wrestling them into submission while adults watched in disbelief.

Sometimes, the animals fought back harder than he expected.

File:Steve irwin rip.jpgDennis Desmond, Wikimedia Commons

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8. He Had A Run-In With A Roo

As good as he was at handling crocs and other animals, even Irwin had a few (read: MANY) close calls. In an incident in 1984, a kangaroo very nearly “disemboweled” Irwin with its claws. Then, four years later, a python attempted to squeeze the life out of him as it coiled around his neck. Those weren't even the most dramatic encounters.

File:AntilopineWallerooLargeMale.jpgDjambalawa, Wikimedia Commons

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9. He Was One Mistake Away From Lights Out

Irwin's real passion was for saltwater crocodiles. But the feeling wasn't always mutual. In an interview, Irwin recounted a run-in he had with a croc that nearly “chomped” his hand clean off. Fortunately, he lived to tell the tale—a cautionary tale. “I realise that one mistake and I could be [done for]”. Still, he couldn't ignore his calling.

File:Steve Irwin, Crocoseum, Australia Zoo in 2003 (5).jpgBiatch2, Wikimedia Commons

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10. He Inherited A Reptile Empire

On October 4, 1991, Irwin's destiny to become the most famous zookeeper of all time took a big step forward when his parents handed him the keys to their kingdom. The Beerwah Reptile Park—which he later renamed Australia Zoo—became his responsibility, his canvas for conservation. At 29, he became the king of a wild empire that would transform conservationism forever.

Australia ZooKaus at English Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons

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11. He Met His Match

Just two days after inheriting an animal kingdom, Irwin met his queen: Terri Raines. Raines was an American naturalist from Oregon on a tour of Australian wildlife facilities when she stumbled into Irwin's zoo. The crocodile wrestler finally found someone whose enthusiasm for nature matched his own.

The feeling was, apparently, mutual.

Gettyimages - 1408434751, CROCODILE10C-C-26JUN02-DD-PC Steve Irwin, TV's San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers, Getty Images

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12. He Was Basically An “Environmental Tarzan”

Raines didn't mince words about their first encounter. “I thought there was no one like this anywhere in the world,” she gushed. To her, Irwin wasn't just another zookeeper—he was “an environmental Tarzan, a larger-than-life superhero guy”. If Irwin was Tarzan, then Raines was his Jane—and he wouldn't let her go.

  Gettyimages - 83636137, John Stanton, Getty Images

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13. His Parents Gave Them Everything

Four months after their initial meeting, Irwin slipped a ring on Raines' finger smoother than lassoing a roo. The couple tied the knot in Eugene, Oregon on June 4, 1992. As a wedding gift, Bob and Lyn Irwin handed the newlyweds the ultimate wedding gift—complete control of their beloved wildlife park.

Unsurprisingly, the couple's honeymoon was anything but typical.

Gettyimages - 83636090, John Stanton, Getty Images

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14. His Honeymoon Involved Crocodile Wrestling

While most couples sip cocktails on tropical beaches to celebrate their nuptials, the Irwins had a different idea. The couple swapped the honeymoon suite for the swamps of Queensland where they spent their honeymoon trapping massive crocodiles. And there was no shortage of them.

Gettyimages - 2175775298, Crocodile hunter Steve Irwin Steve Irwin 11/1/1995, NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES, Crocodile hunter Steve Irwin and wife Terri with alligator Najlah Feanny, Getty Images

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15. He Captured Over 100 Crocodiles

Queensland's East Coast Crocodile Management program was basically a one-man show: a one-man, Steve Irwin show. Working as a volunteer, Irwin wrangled more than 100 problem crocodiles from populated areas. While he relocated some to safer waters, others he moved into his family park. Either way, each capture saved both human and crocodile lives.

His techniques revolutionized the field.

Gettyimages - 71783936, Lisa Maree Williams, Getty Images

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16. He Invented New Capture Methods

Irwin didn't just catch crocodiles—he pioneered the safest ways to do it. Spending months in Queensland's remote wilderness, he developed capture techniques that wildlife experts the world over now use. His methods kept both handlers and crocodiles safer than ever before. But he wasn't just filming training guides.

Gettyimages - 451432463, 2002 ShoWest Opening Day Luncheon Steve Irwin, The Crocodile Hunter during 2002 ShoWest Opening Day Luncheon at Paris Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. Wireimage, Getty Images

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17. His Honeymoon Became Television Gold

Throughout his crocodile-catching honeymoon adventure, Irwin's escapades became the subject matter for John Stainton's cameras. The raw footage of the fearless newlyweds wrestling prehistoric predators became the pilot episode of a little TV show called The Crocodile Hunter. What started as home movies would soon captivate audiences from Sydney to San Francisco.

Screenshot from The Crocodile Hunter (1996–2007)Discovery Channel, The Crocodile Hunter (1996–2007)

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18. He Conquered Two Continents

When The Crocodile Hunter premiered on Australian TVs in 1996, Irwin wrangled more than crocs—he wrangled hearts and minds. The show was an instant success, turning Irwin into an overnight celebrity. By 1997, his khaki-clad figure was bouncing across North American screens, spreading his “Crikey!” catchphrase like wildfire.

Together with his family and his audience, Irwin discovered new wonders of the natural world.

File:The LateBernard DUPONT from FRANCE, Wikimedia Commons

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19. He Discovered A New Species

In 1997, while fishing Queensland's coast with his father, Irwin spotted an unusual turtle—one that even he didn't recognize. The creature turned out to be completely unknown to science. Herpetologist John Cann officially named it Elseya irwini—Irwin's turtle—cementing the zookeeper's name in scientific history forever.

His own home was something of a zoo.

File:Irwin's turtle (2261030419).jpgIan Sutton from Oberon, Australia, Wikimedia Commons

20. His House Crawled With Creatures

Along with his wife and eventual two kids, Irwin lived in a humble home…smack in the middle of his zoo! And the animals didn't exactly pay attention to doors. Jonathan (an iguana) roamed the halls of Irwin's home while ringtail possums (affectionately named Rachel and Roger) scampered overhead. Before long, another little critter would be crawling all over Irwin.

File:Ringtail Possum. Brisbane.jpgAndrew Mercer (www.baldwhiteguy.co.nz), Wikimedia Commons

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21. His Daughter's Namesake Was A Crocodile

On July 24, 1998, Irwin wrangled with his favorite new critter: a 6-pound, 3-ounce bundle of joy named Bindi Sue. True to form, Irwin named the latest addition to his clan after two of his favorite creatures: Bindi, a massive saltwater crocodile, and Sui, his beloved Staffordshire Bull Terrier. Sadly, heartbreak followed.

Gettyimages - 77794205, Australia Zoo Imagery ULURU, AUSTRALIA - OCTOBER 2: Steve Irwin poses with his daughter Bindi Irwin October 2, 2006 in Uluru, Australia. Handout, Getty Images

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22. He Lost His Greatest Champion

In early 2000, Irwin  faced devastating news that shattered his world. His mother, Lyn, tragically perished in a car accident. With fond memories of saving lizards together, Irwin paid tribute to his mother, calling her “the most beautiful, loving, nurturing, and caring person to have ever blessed this world”.

Whatever tragedy he faced, however, Irwin only spread joy wherever he went.

File:Steve Irwin holding Koala.jpgJohn, Wikimedia Commons

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23. He Scared Eddie Murphy's Animals

In 2001, Irwin made his Hollywood debut with a cheeky cameo in Dr Dolittle 2. In his scene, an alligator frantically warns Eddie Murphy's character about the approaching notorious crocodile hunter. Irwin's appearance was so memorable for audiences that Hollywood beckoned for more. And they would get it.

Screenshot from Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001)20th Century Fox, Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001)

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24. His Movie Made Millions

Hollywood put Irwin in the spotlight in 2002's The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course. The $12 million feature film saw Irwin doing what he did best—wrestling crocs and saving wildlife. Audiences—always eager for more Irwin—gobbled it up, pushing box office receipts to $33 million.

Soon another little Irwin would join the adventure.

Screenshot from The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course (2002)Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course (2002)

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25. His Son Honored Two Grandfathers

On December 1, 2003, the Irwin clan grew even larger when Robert Clarence Irwin entered the world weighing 7 pounds, 4 ounces. The boy's name honored both of his grandfathers—Irwin's father Bob and Raine's father Clarence. The Crocodile Hunter now had his own mini-me to carry on the family's wild legacy.

But Irwin would soon make a controversial parenting choice.

Gettyimages - 77794215, Australia Zoo Imagery BEERWAH, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 19: Steve Irwin poses with his family at Australia Zoo June 19, 2006 in Beerwah, Australia.Handout, Getty Images

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26. He Almost (Sorta) Fed His Son To The Crocs

Irwin was determined to raise his kids the same way he was raised: around animals. But, in January of 2004, things took a potentially dangerous turn. Cradling one-month-old Robert in one arm, Irwin hand-fed chicken to Murray. No, not the family dog, but a 12-foot saltwater crocodile. Cameras captured the moment, and the world went ballistic.

File:Robert Clarence Irwin with a parrot.pngQueensland Police Service, Wikimedia Commons

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27. He Showed Audiences Another Angle

Critics compared Irwin's son-in-hand-croc-feeding scandal to Michael Jackson's infamous baby-dangling incident. Without a moment's hesitation, Irwin raced to the TV to explain himself to horrified audiences. He apologized but insisted he'd been in complete control the entire time. He even provided additional footage that showed that he was much further from the croc than initially suspected.

Still, the damage was done.

File:The croc man.jpgRichard Giles aka rich 115, Wikimedia Commons

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28. His Stunt Changed The Law

Despite Irwin's apology and additional footage, the baby-crocodile incident did more than spark outrage—it rewrote the rulebook. Queensland's government slammed down new crocodile-handling laws faster than Murray could snap his jaws. Under the new rules, children and untrained adults were banned from entering crocodile enclosures.

At least the government recognized his other contributions.

File:Crocodile farm in Momabasa 2.jpgVioletova, Wikimedia Commons

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29. He Won Government Honors

Despite the controversy, Australia couldn't ignore Irwin's impact. In 2001, the government awarded him the Centenary Medal for his “service to global conservation and to Australian tourism”. The following year, he launched Wildlife Warriors, a conservation charity that would become his lasting legacy beyond television fame.

More accolades poured in.

Gettyimages - 563611905, STEVE IRWIN, Australian zookeeper and conservationist, has become a media star–with his cable TV showKen Hively, Getty Images

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30. He Was Basically The Best Aussie

2004 saw Irwin crowned “Tourism Export of the Year”—no surprise given how many tourists flocked to Australia hoping to spot the khaki-clad legend wrestling with a croc. He even scored a nomination for Australian of the Year, though cricket captain Steve Waugh snagged the title. Still, not bad for a bloke who started out jumping on crocodiles at boat ramps.

Gettyimages - 3441619, The 46th Annual TV Week Logie Awards Ryan Pierse, Getty Images

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31. His Daughter Got Her Own Show

In January 2006, Irwin bounced onto Jay Leno's couch with exciting news. Discovery Kids was developing a show just for his eight-year-old daughter Bindi. The proud dad beamed as he described his little girl's natural talent with animals. The series would eventually air as Bindi the Jungle Girl—but Irwin wouldn't live to see it.

Screenshot from Bindi the Jungle Girl (2007)Discovery Kids, Bindi the Jungle Girl (2007)

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32. He Had Big Plans

By mid-2006, Irwin's star was still rising—and it was only getting brighter. Together with his wife, Irwin drafted an ambitious 10-year business plan to transform their wildlife park into a globe-spanning wild kingdom. They dreamed of new exhibits, conservation programs, and ways to inspire millions more people to protect wildlife.

Sadly, he would never see those dreams come true.

File:Steve irwin wes terri.jpgAustralia Zoo Pty Ltd, Wikimedia Commons

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33. He Swam Too Close To Danger

On September 4, 2006, Irwin was filming Ocean's Deadliest with Philippe Cousteau Jr in the Great Barrier Reef. But it wasn’t just a regular day in the wild for Irwin. A short-tail stingray—normally docile creatures—suddenly whipped its barb upward. Unfortunately for Irwin, the ray hit its target: him.

Screenshot from Ocean’s Deadliest (2007)Discovery Channel, Ocean’s Deadliest (2007)

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34. He Was Stung By A Ray

While Irwin had wrestled crocs and handled snakes, stingrays were a different animal altogether. As Irwin swam by, the stingray’s serrated spine pierced his chest, causing massive trauma that ultimately led to his demise. Irwin was just 44 years old at the time.

Shockingly, the cameras kept rolling.

File:Stingray with Stinger.pngrayjo, Wikimedia Commons

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35. His Final Moments Were Caught On Camera

The stingray's barb penetrated Irwin’s thoracic wall with devastating precision—all while the cameras rolled. Experts believe that Irwin’s tragic accident is the only stingray fatality ever captured on video. But it was not a video that Irwin would have wanted anyone to see.

Screenshot from Ocean’s Deadliest (2007)Discovery Channel, Ocean’s Deadliest (2007)

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36. His Widow Destroyed The Tapes

When Irwin drew his last breath, the devastating footage went straight to Raines, who made a heart-wrenching decision. Without ever watching the film herself, Raines destroyed the video, ensuring the world would always remember Irwin as he was: smiling, happy, enthusiastic about the natural world, and full of life.

Still, the rumors couldn’t be stopped.

Gettyimages - 105043556, Steve Granitz, Getty Images

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37. He Didn’t Pull The Barb

Initial reports claimed Irwin had yanked the stingray’s barb from his chest—a fatal mistake. However, those who viewed the footage quickly corrected the record: those reports were wrong. The coroner revealed the barb struck the right side of his chest and abdomen, not his heart and that Irwin hadn’t pulled it out. It was the stingray’s venom, not the wound itself, that claimed his life.

File:Southern stingray miami.jpgMatthew Hoelscher from Doral, FL, USA, Wikimedia Commons

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38. He Returned To His Kingdom

On September 9, 2006, Irwin’s closest family and friends gathered for a private funeral service. That same day, they buried him at Australia Zoo—the wildlife park he’d transformed from his father’s reptile park into a conservation empire. The boy who’d grown up wrestling crocodiles would rest forever among the animals he loved.

Millions tuned in to say goodbye.

Gettyimages - 540128843, Steve Irwin Memorial Service. Steve Irwin's manager John Stainton sits with his (AUSTRALIA OUT) Steve Irwin Memorial Service. Steve Irwin's manager John Stainton sits with his widow Terri Irwin with their daughter Bindi and son Bob, and Steve's father Bob, at the memorial service for her husband at Australia Zoo on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, 20 September 2006. The AGE, Getty Images

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39. He United The World In Grief

Animal Planet’s broadcast of Irwin’s memorial service on September 19, 2006 drew an astounding 360 million viewers. From Tokyo to Tennessee, people tuned in to bid farewell to the man who’d made them shout “Crikey!” at their television screens. It was obvious at that moment, Irwin wasn’t just an Australian conservationist, he was the world’s zookeeper.

Gettyimages - 540162673, Steve Irwin Memorial Service. Wreaths laid out to spell 'CRIKEY' during the memo The AGE, Getty Images

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40. His Memorial Packed The Crocoseum

Memorial and funeral services continued with a public service on September 30, 2006 when 5,000 people packed into Australia Zoo’s Crocoseum. But that wasn’t even a fraction of his fans. In homes across the world, more than 300 million people tuned in to watch this memorial service as it was broadcast live. The grief was almost too much to bear.

Gettyimages - 540114145, Steve Irwin Memorial Service. A large crowd attends the memorial service The AGE, Getty Images

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41. His Father Left The Zoo

After Irwin’s passing, the family he’d left behind began falling apart. Bob Irwin’s relationship with his daughter-in-law, Terri Raines, crumbled under grief and disagreements about the zoo’s future and Irwin’s legacy. In a devastating move, the man who’d built Beerwah Reptile Park with his bare hands resigned from Australia Zoo.

The reasons he gave were telling indeed.

Gettyimages - 77920177, Steve Irwin Memorial Day Bradley Kanaris, Getty Images

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42. His Father Couldn't Stay

After his resignation, Bob Irwin spoke out publicly. But what he said was just as controversial as what he didn’t say. After thanking the staff and volunteers, he conspicuously left out any mention of Raines. “I just felt that it was better for everybody concerned if I left,” he explained, adding that he had “a very different sort of opinion”.

Without Irwin, the rift in his surviving family members only deepened.

Gettyimages - 71844826, Bradley Kanaris, Getty Images

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43. His Daughter Called Out Grandpa

In 2021, Bindi Irwin dropped another shocking bit of news that shook the conservation world. She publicly accused her grandfather Bob of showing “no interest” in her family and described their relationship in less than glowing terms. “He has returned gifts I've sent him after he opened them,” Bindi claimed.

Not everyone believed her story.

Gettyimages - 2151337746, Endometriosis Foundation Of America's (EndoFound) 12th Annual Blossom Ball NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 03: Wildlife Conservationist and CEO, Australia Zoo Blossom Award Honoree Bindi Irwin attends the Endometriosis Foundation Of America's (EndoFound) 12th Annual Blossom Ball at Gotham Hall on May 03, 2024 in New York City. Jamie McCarthy, Getty Images

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44. His Father Had Different Memories

Bob’s close friend and biographer Amanda French rushed to his defense, insisting that the elder Irwin “never received anything from Bindi”. If Bob could send one message to his granddaughter, French revealed, it would be simple: “You've always been welcome, and you always will be welcome”. The family that once wrestled crocodiles were now wrestling each other.

But there wasn’t much to fight over.

Gettyimages - 77919942, Steve Irwin Memorial Day Bradley Kanaris, Getty Images

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45. He Left Almost Nothing Behind

For all his global fame and television success, Irwin’s life insurance policy was shockingly modest—just $200,000. Raines revealed the bitter truth of life without Irwin: she didn’t even have enough to cover “half of one week's payroll” at the zoo. In fairness to Irwin, his priorities had always been the wildlife—not a wild life.

Terri Irwin talks to the media at Australia Zoo on May 13, 2008 on the Sunshine Coast, Australia. Irwin is protesting a proposal from the Cape Alumina Pty Ltd company to mine the area around the Steve Irwin Wildlife Reserve on the Cape York Peninsula.  Bradley Kanaris, Getty Images

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46. His Money Went To Animals

Irwin’s tiny inheritance made perfect sense to those who knew him. Every dollar he ever earned went straight back into what he loved: Australia Zoo and its wildlife inhabitants. While other celebrities stockpiled wealth, Irwin stockpiled rescued animals and rehabilitated ecosystems. His bank account stayed empty because his heart—and his zoo—stayed full.

Gettyimages - 77794217, Australia Zoo Imagery BEERWAH, AUSTRALIA - SEPTEMBER 16: Steve Irwin poses with an elephant at Australia Zoo September 16, 2006 in Beerwah, Australia. Handout, Getty Images

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47. He Got A Hollywood Star

Even more than a decade after his passing, Irwin was still making history. In April 2018, everyone’s favorite departed zookeeper became the first conservationist ever awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Even science kept honoring him.

Gettyimages - 951570574, Steve Irwin Honored Posthumously With Star On The Hollywood Walk Of Fame David Livingston, Getty Images

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48. His Name Lives On—In Nature

In 2009, scientists discovered a new Australian air-breathing land snail. Needless to say, they had the perfect name in mind: Crikey steveirwini. That same year, Irwin entered the Queensland Business Leaders Hall of Fame for his “international entrepreneurship” in conservation. But his greatest legacy had nothing to do with wild animals at all.

File:Snail-WA papa edit.jpgMad Max (former Every1blowz), Kirkland, Washington; edited by User:Papa Lima Whiskey, Wikimedia Commons

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49. He Loved People More Than Crocodiles

In honor of his legacy, Irwin’s widow spoke about what truly motivated her husband. “The only thing that could ever keep him away from the animals he loves are the people he loves even more,” she said. Even after a life of wrestling crocodiles and handling venomous snakes, Irwin simply hoped to be remembered for just one thing—being a good father.

Gettyimages - 1408434736, CROCODILE10A-C-26JUN02-DD-PC Steve Irwin got up close and personal with Zydeco, an American Alligator. Irwin, TV's San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers, Getty Images

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50. His Nose Nearly Got Chomped

Fun fact: At four years old, Irwin learned that wildlife bites back. In a wild incident, his father's sulfur-crested cockatoo lunged at his face, nearly tearing off his nose. The attack left him terrified of parrots for life—except for one black cockatoo named Ularoo who somehow earned his trust.

  Gettyimages - 71943833, A Black Cockatoo, one of several birds released, flies above the memorial of Australian environmentalist and television personality Steve Irwin at Australia Zoo in Beerwah, in the Australian state of Queensland, 20 September 2006. AFP, Getty Images

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Sources:  12345


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