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Whoa!
I don't want to, like
be in the water, picking one of these guys up.
Okay.
Whoo!
In the water is, like, hundreds of crocodiles
so I'm getting nervous now.
I know we got to reach our hand in there
and actually pick up a crocodile without a net or anything.
Push down now.
You got him.
You got him.
Oh, comen, boy! Come on.
Are they supposed to freak out like that?
Hold on, hold on, Hold on. Hold on!
Ow!
Now get him, whoo, that's it!
Once you commit, you can't quit.
And then once you grab his tail
someone wraps a rubber band around his mouth.
Make sure that mouth is closed, man.
I got you, I promise.
I promise you I got him, Christina.
Okay.
We got him. That's it.
Now it's yours.
I'm really scared
because I'm afraid that a crocodile's
going to jump out of the water antry and bite me.
All right, you've got one coming up now.
Oh, geez.
He's not big.
That's it, you got him.
Hang on to him.
Oh!
Holy-moly!
Bring him over here.
Push him in.
( shouting )
That's it, you've got him.
Rubber-band him, rubber-band hi
Get those rubber bands on him.
( screaming
It's terrifying
because they have sharp teeth, and, you know
they're not afraid snap at you.
That's it.
I'm saying bad words.
I just stepped on a croc, for the love of... goodness.
Okay, I'm holding him with my life.
I'm not even kidding around.
Bring him up he.
Push him down.
As long as you hold their mouth shut
you're all right.
But if you get scared and let go
it's not a pretty sight.
Hang on to it.
That's it. Hang on to it.
Please, help me, please!
Reach down, grab it behind the shoulders.
Now, when I run my hand behind his back
he's not going to do anything?
No, he shouldn't.
Oh, okay.
He'll wriggle when you come out
so just hang on to him tightly when you lift him out.
He didn't wriggle, he didn't wriggle.
Move him away from me, man.
Geez.
What's going on here, yo?
( screaming )
( laughing )
Not a good move.
After we picked the crocs out of the water
we have to weigh them, we have to measure them.
SUSIE: After we weigh them
we have to put them, like, basically in a corner
of this corridor
like a little hallway.
This one's coming back, I guarantee it.
Well, I'm right behind you.
Oh, come on!
No, no, no, no.
( laughing )
When you see a croc coming towards you
whether it has a rubber band on its mouth or not
you're going to panic.
( screaming)
He ain't getting anywhere, watch him.
Get him.
PIGGY: He's going to take himself all the way home.
Ow!
Oh...!
SUSIE: Piggy!
What?!
SUSIE: Total anarchy-- the crocs running everywhere.
Piggy and I are trying to keep them down in the corner.
It's not working.
( shouting )
You've handled the small ones, you know how strong they are.
We'll go out to get, uh...
These crocodiles we're catching now
are going to be about five or six feet long.
We're not going to touch them anymore.
So... well, you got to jump on them.
Get lost.
We'll be using poles and ropes.
I wasn't even comfortable with the one-year-olds, so
I don't know how I'll handle the bigger ones.
You put a rope over their top jaw first.
Drag him out.
And then you get another rope over both jaws.
You throw a hitching bag
over their head so they can't see.
And you walk around behind them
and while the two people are holding a rope each
the third person jumps on him.
Basically what we're going
to be doing is, we're putting a noose
around the top jaw of the crocodile.
Push and pull...
Got him.
Pull him out.
Yeah!
Pulling the crocodile out
into an open space where we can work with it
and then pull the ropes tight, the jaw is closed.
Put a bag over its head, right?
You can do it.
If you put a bag over
my head and jump on me
I'll probably freak out.
I know that when I get scared
sometimes I lash out.
I just don't want them to be really scared
and then try and bite my arm off.
Crocodiles are aggressive and feisty
and if you get in that pen
even though they're afraid of you
they'll probably want a piece of you.
All right, here's a decent one.
It just doesn't se safe.
He's a big guy, huh?
You'll only get one quick chance at this.
Geez.
Little did we know that this pen that we were in
housed a little over 350 crocodiles.
Oh, my goodness!
Hold him there.
Hold him there.
Hold him there.
Don't let him come out.
Don't let him come out.
He'll get me.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh!
Get him back up.
Hang on, hang on.
Oh, my Lord.
Get him back down here now.
Back down here, and we'll take him arw■nd.
( growling )
( growls )
A six-foot crocodile is basically one big muscle.
That's what a crocodile is.
Its tail is extremely strong
so it can hit you in the face with that
or it can bite your leg off.
We have to move the larger crocodiles into different pens
because they're dominating over the smaller crocodiles
eating their food and taking their space.
Jump on him.
Push him into the ground.
I've got him.
Hang on to that real hard.
Ha, not so tough now, eh?
Okay, okay.
Not feeling good about this
but, I mean, I know I got to get paid
and, you know, coming close to the end of this journey here
and I want to just say I've done something, you know
so I can look back anytime and say
"You know, I wrestled crocodiles befo."
Any sudden movements, clear the exit ways.
Pick him straight up.
That's it, he's all yours, you control him.
Ooh, ooh, he's pissed.
He got my clothes in there!
He starts wrapping and rolling
and he catches my shirt.
Look at him, he's got my clothes.
Get the knife. You can cut the shirt.
Cut the shirt! Cut the shirt!
Do you hae a knife?
Cut the shirt!