Skip to main content

VIDEO: Kangaroo takes out cyclist down under

It caught all the cyclists by surprise when a young bounding kangaroo decided to hurl itself at the peloton during a bicycle race in Australia. A fellow racer trailing behind took the video. The targeted cyclist was severely bruised from hitting the deck and he needed stitches. But the marauding kangaroo apparently died from its injuries when it slammed into the bike at a right angle. Cyclists being taken out by kangaroos is more common than most non-Australians would think. Click here to see one cycl
July 25, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
It caught all the cyclists by surprise when a young bounding kangaroo decided to hurl itself at the peloton during a bicycle race in Australia.

A fellow racer trailing behind took the video. The targeted cyclist was severely bruised from hitting the deck and he needed stitches. But the marauding kangaroo apparently died from its injuries when it slammed into the bike at a right angle.

Cyclists being taken out by kangaroos is more common than most non-Australians would think. %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Click here Visit a YouTube page false https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gatNsYA93OY false false%> to see one cyclist on an urban street in Canberra hit the tarmac along a busy road, thanks to a kangaroo cutting her up. This unscathed ‘roo went merrily on its way, albeit prancing across the two lanes of traffic.

However, it’s not just kangaroos that appear to have it in for cyclists, either the on-road or off-road type. Indeed, the assistant editor of World Highways decided there was little to be gained by cycling past a bear when it appeared ahead of him on a remote road in Canada’s Jasper National Park. The brown bear showed no signs moving off the pavement so it became a waiting game rather than tempting fate.

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal Click here Visit a YouTube page false https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2oymHHyV1M false false%> to see this mountain biker in South Africa being taken out at high speed by a charging antelope. The buck, head down, leaps across the road, slams into the cyclist and then bounces head over hooves into the tall grass, only to get up and speed off. The cyclist, who took the broadside, was stunned but was also saved by his helmet.

Related Content

  • High court drama expected at Highways UK event, NEC, Birmingham
    November 7, 2016
    What happens when a highways services employee is prosecuted for failing to follow established safety procedures? How would a courtroom drama unfold for the accused and the employer?
  • Losing your car ain’t as hard as you would think
    April 29, 2015
    Thankfully it doesn’t happen too often, but forgetting where you parked your car can be an embarrassing moment, or several days, as one man in the UK recently found. Jason Matthews, 40, ran the Manchester City Marathon on April 19 in five hours and 11 minutes and then spent an additional several hours looking for his Saab 93 Sport. He said he couldn’t recall where he had parked the vehicle. He walked back around some of the 26-mile – nearly 42km - course, before driving around in a taxi for 40 minutes an
  • Hi-viz hijinks make a flockery of saftey clothing
    September 16, 2015
    Fashionable they aren’t, but the wearing of high-visibility clothing is increasingly either recommended by businesses or made mandatory by law, especially for construction workers on every kind of site. But has the use of “hi-vis” clothing, especially the vest, gone too far? In Britain, the wearing of the hi-viz clothing has taken off - literally, according to a BBC television news report that shows a flock of chickens wearing the fluorescent coloured vest.
  • McKinsey to present major construction sector report at bauma
    March 3, 2016
    Consultancy McKinsey and Company will launch its report Perspectives on the Construction Equipment Industry in Europe during the upcoming bauma exhibition in Munich. The report will be presented at joint seminar with the CECE – Committee for European Construction Equipment – in the bauma fairgrounds on April 13 when leading McKinsey analysts and CECE officials discuss main trends and challenges facing manufactures and buyers of equipment.