Yes, it's true!!   Of course, the family concerned thinks it was a deliberate
act of kindness and concern on the part of the kangaroo.  A wild-life expert
has a more mundane explanation:  that the kangaroo was used to following
whoever left the back door of the house for food...and probably had even learnt
that knocking on the door produced food.  The expert thinks that, being hungry,
the kangaroo just followed whoever was the next to come out of the house.

*That* brought a flood of callers to the radio station, all determined to
"prove" that the kangaroo really did know it was getting help by telling their
own stories of tamed kangaroos.   I didn't know there were so many tame
kangaroos out there...and before you all ask, no, we don't see kangaroos in the
streets of the cities in Australia!!!!

Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)
Jean Nathan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:There was a wonderful
(apparently true) story on our local radio station
this morning.

An Australian farmer was hit on the head by a falling branch during a storm.
He received severe head injuries. The alarm was raised at his farmhouse by a
kangaroo that the family had adopted. It was blind in one eye, was competely
tame and thought it was a dog! It hammered on the farmhouse door with its
front feet until someone came out, and then led them to the injured farmer.
He received medical treatment and recovered.

So Skippy lives!

Jean in Poole

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