Golfer vows to return after croc bite

A golfer vowed to get back on the course after being bitten by a crocodile as he retrieved a ball from a water trap.

A golfer vowed to get back on the course after being bitten by a crocodile as he retrieved a ball from a water trap.

Published Apr 14, 2015

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A golfer vowed to get back on the course after being bitten by a crocodile as he retrieved a ball from a water trap during a round in Australia.

John Lahiff, 75, was playing at the Palmer Sea Reef Golf Course in Port Douglas, 70 kilometres north of popular tourist town Cairns, on Monday afternoon when he hooked his ball into the water on the 11th hole.

“I drove the cart around to retrieve the ball – and I didn't see the croc sunbaking just on the edge of the water,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

“I walked past it and then it got me on the way back and as soon as it grabbed me it took off into the water.”

The 1.5-metre (five-foot) saltwater crocodile left him with a deep cut on his shin and puncture wounds to his calf.

He managed to drive himself back to the clubhouse where an ambulance was called and he was taken to hospital.

Undeterred, Lahiff said he planned to keep playing golf.

“I'll just stay away from them, that's all. Just don't hit the balls in the water.”

Rangers were attempting to trap the animal on Tuesday and relocate it to a zoo or crocodile farm, but Lahiff said he would prefer it remained at the course, where signs warn that crocodiles inhabit the area.

“It's partly my fault... for disturbing it while it was sunbaking,” he said.

“I think he got more of a fright than me. He's alright.”

Crocodiles are common in Australia's tropical north where numbers have increased since the introduction of protection laws in 1971, with government estimates putting the population at 75 000 to 100 000. – AFP

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