Rod Ansell

Birthday October 1, 1954

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Murgon, Queensland, Australia

DEATH DATE 1999-8-3, Acacia Hills, Northern Territory, Australia (44 years old)

Nationality Australia

#42717 Most Popular

1954

Rodney William Ansell (1 October 1954 – 3 August 1999) was an Australian cattle grazier and a buffalo hunter.

1977

Described to be from "the bush", Ansell became famous in 1977 after he was stranded in extremely remote country in the Northern Territory, and the story of his survival for 56 days with limited supplies became news headlines around the world.

In May 1977, shortly after completing a buffalo catching job in Kununurra, Western Australia, Ansell decided to travel to the Victoria River on what he claimed was a fishing trip.

He was not specific about his plans, only telling his then-girlfriend Lorraine he would be back in a few months.

When Ansell's motorboat was capsized and sunk by "something big" (he later sensationally claimed it was a whale), no one knew where to find him.

Ansell managed to board his tender, a small dinghy with only a single oar, and retrieve his two 8-week-old bull terriers and a small amount of equipment (a rifle, a knife, some canned food, and bedding).

But with no fresh water, Ansell was in a perilous situation, stranded almost 200 km from the nearest permanent human settlement, and one of his dogs had a broken leg.

During the night, Ansell's dinghy drifted out to sea, eventually washing up on a small island at the mouth of the Fitzmaurice River, north of the Victoria River.

Over the next 48 hours, Ansell travelled up the Fitzmaurice on tidal flows, becoming severely dehydrated but eventually finding fresh water above the saltwater tidal range.

Ansell subsisted on wild cattle and buffalo, hunting by day to feed himself and his dogs.

He sometimes resorted to drinking cattle blood as a substitute for water, the fluids helping to maintain his body's electrolyte balance.

He was also able to follow bees to their hive to retrieve honey.

During the night, Ansell slept in a tree fork out of reach of crocodiles, although he shared the tree with a brown tree snake.

At one point, he shot a 5 m crocodile, whose head he kept as a souvenir.

Ansell never counted on being rescued; he had told others he would be away for months, and any search parties would be combing over the Victoria River, not the Fitzmaurice.

He rested his hope on walking overland to a pastoral station when the wet season began.

One day, Ansell heard the distinctive tinkling of horse-bells, which drew him to two Aboriginal stockmen and their cattle manager, Luke McCall.

Although he was somewhat emaciated, Ansell was otherwise healthy.

Once back home, he apparently kept his seven-week ordeal to himself, fearing he would upset his mother with his recklessness.

He later claimed the experience was hardly a big deal, explaining:"All the blokes up in this country, who work with cattle, ringers, stockmen, bull-catches, whatever, all of them, have really narrow shaves all the time. But they never talk about it...I think the opinion is that if you come through in one piece, and you're still alive, then nothing else really matters. It's like going out to shoot a kangaroo. You don't come back and say you missed by half-an-inch. You either got him or you didn't. So that is how I looked at it. Until the paper got hold of the story, and that changed a lot of things."

Newspapers dubbed Ansell the "modern-day Robinson Crusoe" and he was making headlines by August 1977.

In 1977, after becoming a sensation in the Australian media following his harrowing ordeal in the Outback, Ansell met Joanne van Os, 22, a radio operator originally from Melbourne who was then working at the remote Aboriginal community of Wadeye.

1979

The two fell in love and married, having two sons: Callum (born 1979) and Shawn (born 1981).

The family spent much of their early years living "under just a canvas sheet."

With no electricity or running water, they cooked by campfire and communicated by radio.

In 1979, filmmaker Richard Oxenburgh asked Ansell to relive his adventures in the documentary film To Fight the Wild, which the following year was published as a book.

Although both accepted Ansell's version of events uncritically, his story was frequently treated with scepticism by locals in the Top End.

Some believed it was a publicity stunt and others wondered why Ansell did not follow the river downstream to the nearest town.

When Ansell was asked in interviews what he was doing in the remote Australian wilderness by himself, he claimed he was on a fishing trip.

Privately, however, he confided to friends that he was actually poaching crocodiles.

1981

In 1981, Ansell was invited to Sydney where he was interviewed by English journalist Michael Parkinson for his television program Parkinson.

Ansell attended the interview barefoot.

While staying at the famous five-star Sebel Townhouse Hotel, he slept in his sleeping bag on the floor rather than on his bed, and was reportedly mystified by his room's bidet.

Ansell's interview and curious city antics sparked Paul Hogan's interest, inspiring him and co-writers Ken Shadie, and John Cornell to create the character Mick "Crocodile" Dundee.

Following the unexpected blockbuster success of Crocodile Dundee, Ansell unsuccessfully took Hogan to court.

1986

Consequently, he served as the inspiration for Paul Hogan's character in the 1986 film Crocodile Dundee.

1999

In 1999, he was killed in a shootout by policemen of the Northern Territory Police.

Ansell was born in Murgon, Queensland, to George William Ansell and Eva May Ansell, the third of four children.

He then moved to the Northern Territory at the age of 15.

As a young man, he made a living hunting feral water buffalo in the Top End, the meat being exported to foreign markets.