logo
EXCLUSIVE I love Irwin my kangaroo. But his latest showdown with Colorado cops may force me into a heartbreaking choice

EXCLUSIVE I love Irwin my kangaroo. But his latest showdown with Colorado cops may force me into a heartbreaking choice

Daily Mail​6 days ago

Long-time dog and cat owner Doneva Littlefield always thought she'd like a monkey if she ever got an exotic pet.
But when a friend of hers became overwhelmed last June by two baby kangaroos he'd bought, she hopped at the chance to take them in.
She had no idea what she was getting into and a year later her pet and her hometown of Durango, Colorado, have become repeated international viral sensations.
The older 'roo, Irwin (named after the iconic zookeeper Steve) escaped from her home not once, but twice – all of it caught on camera by cops who wrangled him back to safety.
The first time in October prompted a 911 call from a confused local who said a kangaroo with a diaper was walking down the street,
Just last week, Irwin absconded again – only to be tracked close by near a neighbor's house.
As officers tried to get within distance to grab him, Irwin took a jump – straight into the arms of one of the officers.
'The kangaroo was a lot nicer than I thought it'd be,' Durango Officer Shane Garrison, 24, tells Daily Mail.
He was so touched by the experience, in fact, that he offered up his family's 40-acre farm as a possible new home for the kangaroo brothers when Doneva's husband stopped by the station to pick Irwin up.
'He was talking about rehoming it, and I kind of just pitched him the idea of me taking him home - and it kind of just grew from there,' Officer Garrison says.
It's a possibility being considered by Doneva and her spouse, Brian.
'My husband hasn't been as much on board with this (keeping kangaroos) as I've been,' she says.
'He's just handed the check book over every time I've needed something.'
Keeping the kangaroos costs them up to $600 a month, a bill far more expensive than either of them could have imagined.
They did have an inkling that it wouldn't be easy.
The kangaroos' first owner said he initially thought it would be 'a lot of fun', but the costs quickly became overwhelming.
Irwin and Roo eat alongside the Littlefields pet dogs, an Australian shepherd and Shih Tzu mix
Still, Doneva offered to buy them, and fell in love with them at first sight, she says.
Irwin was about seven months old and his little brother, Roo, was around two months younger when they arrived in their new Colorado home.
They were jumping into special pouches made out canvas and soft blanket-like material to mirror their mother's body.
She purchased Roo and Irwin for $3,000 each.
The 'roos took over the bedroom of Doneva's daughter, who was heading off to college.
She prepared bottles filled half with evaporated milk and half with water and fitted them with adult diapers.
Irwin and Roo began their lives at the LIttlefields' home by sleeping in their pouches in the bedroom of Doneva's daughter Paxton (pictured) who had just finished high school and was going off to college
Irwin, she says fondly, 'has been a menace since the day we got him.'
'There's no boundaries with that kangaroo,' she says. 'If I'm eating something and he's near me, he's trying to get it from me … he's grabbing everything.'
Irwin, she says, has 'always been very in key with what's going on around him, and he wants to be with humans,' she says.
She adds that he loves attention, and his stunts show he certainly knows how to get it, too.
Last October, when the kangaroos were younger and still spending most of the time inside the home, Irwin absconded from a door Brian had left open while Doneva was in New Mexico.
She'd taken the kangaroos out in Durango before, meaning that Irwinn 'knew where he was going, and he knew exactly how to get home.
'As soon as the police started running into him … he ran straight back, right to our house, right to our backyard.
That's where the police - and Brian - found him.
'My husband just took off his sweater and held it like a pouch, and Irwin came hopping right in the pouch,' she says.
More than six months went by without incident as the 'roos kept growing.
But Irwin - who now reaches Doneva's eye level when standing and weighs 70 pounds -unexpectedly went exploring again on May 19.
Doneva had gone five or six nights without sleep.
In a bid to get accustomed to the kangaroos living outside, she's been sleeping during the day and staying up all night to check on the 'roos every 15 minutes.
Around 6am last Monday, however, she glanced outside for her routine check – and Irwin was nowhere to be found.
She ran back inside 'in a panic' to wake up her husband, and they began combing the streets of Durango.
He husband went to file a police report – only to be told that Irwin had already been picked up and dropped off at the humane society.
But not before Officer Garrison's body camera footage recorded the hilarious capture, as well as his comment about how soft Irwin's fur felt.
Doneva doesn't know exactly how Irwin escaped, but she believes it was by mistake.
She wonders if a wild animal patrolling the street, like a raccoon, spooked him and sparked him to jump over the fence surrounding their yard.
Since he's returned, she says, they've been shoring up the enclosure and reinstalled a pulsating electric fence – but the offer of a farm may seem like the best option.
'What we're doing is unsustainable,' she says. 'I can't keep doing this.'
They're visiting Officer Garrison's farm and 'family compound' this weekend, he says; it's where he grew up 'capturing calves and goats, horses, things like that.'
'It'd be cool to be able to raise a kangaroo and hopefully make them have a better life, where [Irwin] can run around and be normal,' he says.
'Normal' might be a stretch when it comes to marsupials leaping through the fields of southwestern Colorado; Doneva has spent the past year watching pedestrians do double-takes outside her house and motorists nearly run stop signs.
She's thrilled that her 'roos have become woven into the fabric of Durango's community - and hopes to work out visits whenever she wants if her pets resettle on nearby farmland, Officer Garrison's or otherwise.
'No matter what it's cost me or what, I've gained a lifetime of beauty and peace with having these creatures,' she says.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas
Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas

BBC News

time39 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas

Grand Slam Track is investigating the alleged abuse of three-time Olympic gold medallist Gabby Thomas at a meet in Philadelphia over the American sprinter posted on X, external on Monday to say that a man had followed her around the track and then shouted personal insults at her as she signed autographs for fans."Honestly the heckling is tolerable, it's following me around the stadium that's wild," Thomas, 28, wrote in a later added that "anybody who enables him online is gross".Responding to a previous Thomas post, a man shared a video of him heckling the sprinter at the starting line of the 200m, in which Thomas was narrowly beaten by Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, and said the result helped him win a bet."I made Gabby lose by heckling her. And it made my parlay win," he a statement to The Athletic, external, the event organisers said: "Grand Slam Track is conducting a full investigation into the reprehensible behaviour captured on video."We are working to identify the individual involved and will take appropriate action as necessary."We will implement additional safeguards to help prevent incidents like this in the future. Let us be clear, despicable behaviour like this will not be tolerated."

Cardi B makes shocking claim about cheating ex Offset as she sparks fan concern
Cardi B makes shocking claim about cheating ex Offset as she sparks fan concern

Daily Mail​

time40 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Cardi B makes shocking claim about cheating ex Offset as she sparks fan concern

Cardi B revealed the shocking reason she had no choice but to file for divorce from estranged husband Offset back on July 31 following six years of marriage. The 32-year-old Grammy winner was traumatized over 'waking up each day' to a new article about the 33-year-old father-of-six's philandering ways like when he brought Atlanta-based model Melanie Jayda with him to Dubai in January. Cardi B (born Belcalis Almánzar) started seeing a therapist last year because she was suffering from 'frequent headaches' and was 'literally losing my mind.' 'I gave chances after chances after chances after chances,' the half-Dominican, half-Trinidadian star - who boasts 281.2M social media followers - confessed on X Spaces Tuesday. 'If I was still there [in that marriage], I was going to end up going to jail because I was going to end up killing him. Seriously, with my own bare hands because it was getting too much.' Cardi B and Offset (born Kiari Kendrell Cephus) had legally separated in November 2023, but the on/off nature of their romance resulted in the birth of their eight-month-old baby daughter Blossom. 'My baby came out 5lbs because I couldn't eat because I was so depressed because of the lies and the constant drama,' the Higher Love rapper cried. 'This is more than the cheating. It's just like the constant lies, the gaslighting - it was really messing up with my head.' The three-time Grammy nominee previously accused Cardi B of cheating on him 'with a baby inside' but on Tuesday she doubled down: 'I was married for seven years. I was faithful for seven years. Before that, I was engaged for three years.' Cardi B counted all of her blessings - talent, health, wealth, cars, property, and cute children - and noted that Offset was her only liability. 'We did help each other with our jobs. But it's like you're helping me, but you're destroying me at the same time,' the Kamala Harris campaigner explained. 'You gotta go. You become a liability to my work, you gotta go.' MailOnline has reached out to her reps for comment. Cardi B and Offset's divorce battle got even uglier when he filed for spousal support last week - according to TMZ. The Migos alum has also requested joint legal custody of their six-year-old daughter Kulture Kiari Cephus, three-year-old son Wave Set Cephus, and eight-month-old baby daughter Blossom. The Enough Miami rapper previously separated from Offset from December 5, 2018 to January 31, 2019 amid cheating allegations. The on/off hip-hop couple's first date was the 2017 Super Bowl. Cardi B (born Belcalis Almánzar) started seeing a therapist last year because she was suffering from 'frequent headaches' and was 'literally losing my mind' (pictured Sunday) On Tuesday, Offset appeared to have deleted his Instagram and X accounts the day after Cardi B went Instagram official with her new boyfriend, New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs. The Love & Hip Hop: New York alum will be honored with the Voice of the Culture Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers during an invite-only ceremony next Sunday in Los Angeles, CA. Cardi B previously received ASCAP's Rhythm & Soul Songwriter of the Year Award two years in a row, eight ASCAP Pop Music Awards, and 23 ASCAP Rhythm & Soul Music Awards. The former stripper is next scheduled to perform June 27 at Under the K Bridge Park in Brooklyn, NY alongside Hercules & Love Affair, COBRAH, Sofia Kourtesis, Danny Tenaglia, and Alex Chapman. Cardi B - who gets 28.4M monthly listeners on Spotify - has vowed to release the long-delayed sophomore follow-up to her 2018 debut studio album Invasion of Privacy this year.

James Carville eviscerates progressives like AOC with nasty new three-word nickname
James Carville eviscerates progressives like AOC with nasty new three-word nickname

Daily Mail​

time40 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

James Carville eviscerates progressives like AOC with nasty new three-word nickname

Longtime Democratic strategist James Carville dumped on the so-called 'pom pom caucus' - progressives including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders - as he tried to hand his party a potent issue to get them out of the gutter. In a new podcast for Politicon, the former adviser to President Bill Clinton said Democrats needed to focus on 'what they're doing to our veterans.' He also encouraged Democrats to rain on President Donald Trump 's military parade - that marks both his birthday and the Army's - as it forced Vietnam veterans to move their annual commemoration from the memorial on the National Mall. 'Screw the Qatari jet and the Democrats' low numbers and who's the leader of the party and what's the message and all of the constipated, convoluted s*** you see and hear about,' Carville said. 'This is the No. 1 issue, this has every visual you can imagine, it's justice versus evil, it's being a great citizen to being a turncoat.' Carville pointed out how the Trump administration planned to eliminate more than 80,000 jobs from the Department of Veterans Affairs, including from the suicide prevention hotline. 'This is, I think, a great time - you know, we've got the pom pom caucus out there "yeah team fight team fight, we're going to get him, we're going to get him." You actually have a piece of ground that you can fight on. It's a noble piece of ground,' Carville said. 'You don't have to go to Coachilla,' Carville continued, mispronouncing the California music festival Coachella, which Sanders addressed in April. 'Or somewhere and speak to rallies. You can do it right there and it's something that people give a s*** about - give a big s*** about.' Carville said that the messaging around veterans could force voters to ponder a bigger question. 'If they are going to screw and cut and trample and disrespect a veteran - what are they going to do to you?' the Democratic strategist said. He pointed out that Americans understand this issue. 'They know what a veteran is, they know what a suicide is, they know what an obligation is, they know what a country is,' Carville said. The strategist also floated that it could be a winner with the moderate and progressive sides of the party. 'I would ask my friends on the progressive side of the equation, or whatever it is, this is something we can join together in,' Carville said. 'This is a fight that we can fight together.' Carville helped lead President Bill Clinton to victory in 1992 after 12 years of Republicans in the White House by moderating the Democrats' message. He sees a future where that move could work again, whereas Ocasio-Cortez, Sanders and other progressive members of the party has pushed for the Democrats to move leftward. 'So this is our golden opportunity,' Carville said. 'You do it in your hometown, do it in the courthouse square. Organize people. Bring them together. Use flags, use music.' 'I'll tell you what's a good one, play When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again. The Trump administration is going to f*** Johnny!' Carville suggested. 'That's what's going to happen to Johnny!' 'He's going to end up eating a .38! And his last call is going to be to a non-existent veterans suicide prevention hotline,' Carville continued. 'Take that! Take that!' As for the Trump parade, which will take place the evening of June 14th - Flag Day - Carville rolled his eyes at the cost, while at the same time the administration is cutting veteran benefits. 'So he wants to have a parade and you know now it's going to cost $16 million to repair streets. Oh f*** that,' Carville said. 'We're not into $16 million here.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store