Kangaroo with a Mean Right Hook Foils Paraglider's Perfect Landing

” I believed it was getting along.”

Credit: ViralHog/YouTube

A paraglider’s current and unforeseen close encounter with a belligerent kangaroo left him feeling a little punchy.

Jonathan Bishop had actually been paragliding cross-country near Canberra, Australia, on March 7, recording his flight on video that he later on published to YouTube, according to a description of the video footage

However while the birds-eye view from above was awesome, maybe Bishop must have been paying closer attention to what was waiting on him on the ground– a human-size marsupial with a mean best hook. [Marsupial Gallery: A Pouchful of Cute]

After about 2 hours in the air, Bishop began his descent. He intended towards a landing pad at the Orroral Valley tracking station, a website previously utilized to support Earth-orbiting satellites.

Bishop’s descent video lasts just 34 seconds. At the start, absolutely nothing seems unusual on the ground far below. However if you’re expecting kangaroos, you can see a set hopping into view about 3 seconds into the video, outside the boundary of a circular cleaning where Bishop is coming in for a landing. Minutes prior to he touches down, a kangaroo can be seen hopping towards him, approaching amazingly quick.

” I believed it was getting along,” Bishop stated on YouTube. However the kangaroo’s welcoming ended up being an energetic boxing maneuver; it assaulted Bishop two times prior to hopping away.

The occurrence was caught by Bishop’s helmet electronic camera and rapidly went viral; it has actually considering that been seen on YouTube over 1 million times.

Though Bishop does not recognize the kangaroo types, it seems an eastern grey kangaroo ( Macropus giganteus), which is discovered throughout eastern Australia in the millions and can hop as quick as 39 miles per hour (64 km/h), according to the Australian Museum

With numerous kangaroos living in close distance to individuals, interactions end up being inescapable (though Bishop’s experience was abnormally aggressive). In July, consistent dry spell drove countless eastern grey kangaroos into the city of Canberra to look for food, where they demolished green lawn in parks, schoolyards and sports fields, Australian news website News.com reported.

Initially released on Live Science