"Confronting a Cassowary, Etty Bay, North Queensland".
"Confronting a Cassowary, Etty Bay, North Queensland".
If you had been around the rainforest of north Queensland or Papua New Guinea 40 or more million years ago you would have met this creature just as it appears today.
It's Australia biggest, and said to be world's deadliest, bird although the last death in Australia occurred 93 years ago. The last-known Australian victim was 16-year-old hunter Phillip McClean, who tripped while fleeing from a bird in Australia in April 1926. It was when McClean was on the ground that he received a fatal blow to the neck. (Don't run from these birds. They can easily outpace us. Slowly move to, or create, cover e.g. behind a tree and/or sling your back pack forward.)
The only other recorded human death was in April 2019, when a 75-year-old man was attacked by (at least) one of these exotic birds that he reared on his property in Florida, USA. His injuries were so severe that he later died in hospital.
The bird I confronted is a rare specimen, tamed by people feeding it. It's stare meant it was checking me out for food. At least I hoped it was, as I stood my ground for a fraction of a second to get this photo for you!
(Hand-feeding of cassowaries is a risk to birds and people. Wild cassowaries conditioned to human food can be aggressive when protecting themselves or their chicks, or seeking other human food.)
Normally Cassowaries are wary around humans and will flee if you approach. However if they are cornered, or have to defend their chicks, they attack with muscular legs that can pack a powerful kick.
The legs terminate with three claw-tipped toes. The claw on the inner toe is particularly formidable, reaching lengths of 12 cm (5 in)! If a cassowary feels threatened, it will leap up and strike out with these dagger-like weapons, inflicting potentially lethal wounds to internal organs and causing severe bleeding. Evisceration is a potential result.
(Etty Bay foreshore, north Queensland, Nikon D750, Nikkor 28-300 mm lens, Nikon SB900 Flash.)