312 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD 



Between them they beat off and killed the kangaroo, and dragged Pat to land in a half- 

 drowned and almost insensible condition. Pat recovered, and vowed " niver to meddle with 

 sui h big bastes " again. 



The doe kangaroos, while of smaller size and possessing much less staying power than 

 their mates, can nevertheless afford a good run for horses and dogs, and are commonly known 

 as "flyers." When carrying a youngster, or "Joey," in her pouch, and hard pressed by the 

 , it is a common thing for the parent to abstract her offspring from the pouch with her 

 fore paws, and to throw it aside into the hush. The instinct of self-preservation only, by 

 the discharge of hampering impedimenta, is usually ascribed to this act; but it is an open 

 question whether the maternal one of securing a chance of escape for her young, while feeling 

 powerless to accomplish it for herself, does not more often represent the actual condition of 

 the case. 



In proportion to the size of its body the kangaroo yields but a limited amount of meat 

 that is esteemed for food. The tail represents the most highly appreciated portion, since from 

 it can be compounded a soup not only equal to ordinary ox-tail, but by gourmands considered 



so superior that its conservation and export 

 have proved a successful trade enterprise. 

 The loins also are much esteemed for the 

 table, but the hind limbs are hard and i oarse, 

 and only appreciated by the native when 

 rations are abnormally short. " Steamer," 

 composed of kangaroo-flesh mixed with slices 

 of ham, represented a standing and very 

 popular dish with the earlier Australian 

 settlers; but with the rapid disappearance of 

 the animal before the advance of colonisation 

 this one time common concoction possesses 

 at the present day a greater traditional than 

 actual reputation. 



The hunting of the kangaroo is con- 

 ducted on several distinct lines, the method 

 of its pursuit being varied, according to 

 whether the animal is required for the 

 primary object of food, for the commercial 

 value of its skin, as a matter of pure 

 sport, or to accomplish its wholesale destruc- 

 tion in consequence of its encroachments mi 

 the pasturage required fur sheep- and cattle-grazing. 



The greatest measure of healthy excitement in hunting the kangaroo, from the standpoint 

 f pure sport, is no doubt t<> be obtained when running tin- marsupial down with horse and 

 hounds in congenial company, as referred to on a previous page. The stalking of the animal 

 single-handed on horseback or on fo.it, much after the manner of the deer, has also its 

 enthusiastic votaries, and calls into play the greatest amount of patience and savoir-faire on 

 the p.ut oi the sportsman It lias been affirmed by a Queensland writer, " To kill kangaroos 

 with a stalking-horse requires the practice of a lifetime, and few 'new chums' have the 

 patience to learn it. It is, in fact, only stockmen, black-fellows, and natives of the bush who 

 can by this method expect to make kangaroo-shooting pay." The horse which is successfully 

 employed by experienced bushmen for stalking purposes is specially trained to its work, and, 

 walking apparently un< om i rnedly in the direction of the selected quarry, brings the gunners. 

 if they are experts in the art of keeping themselves well concealed, within easy range. In 

 this manner two or three kangaroos are not infrequently shot in the same stalk, the animals 

 having a tendency, on hearing the .report of the gun, but not locating the direction from which 



Photo hi D. L> Sou// [jVfe/Aourarf 



ALBINO RED-BELLIED WALLABY 



Many </ the M.n upials, including Kangaroos iitul the Opposum-ltkt 



Phalangers t cxhtl>:t a tendency 10 albinism 



