Kim Waters
Queenscliff golfers fear they will have to take matters into their own hands if the Defence Department refuses to stop âout of controlâ kangaroos tearing up their Swan Island course.
Greens chairman Kevin Cameron said the club was at âits wits endâ over damage from more than 400 kangaroos digging up the course every night.
âWeâre losing members because of this and itâs costing the club a lot of money and time in extra maintenance,â Mr Cameron said.
âWe fix the damage, wait a week and then itâs back again – the whole situation is heartbreaking.â
Mr Cameron said members had considered organising a âkangaroo steak associationâ.
âWe feel like beating our heads against the wall.
âThe army keeps telling us it will handle it but then it doesnât do anything. âIn the meantime the kangaroos are digging up our greens and costing us huge amounts of money.â
Mr Cameron said âgreensâ were standing in the way of a cull.
âI donât care if the army comes in one night and shoots the whole lot of them but it would get into trouble from all the environmentalists.â
Mr Cameron said environmentalists had disputed the clubâs claims that the islandâs kangaroos were digging through the course.
âWe try to explain the problem to visitors and members but weâre sick of making excuses.â
The army brought kangaroos to the high-security island, promising they were sterile. But the animals began breeding, leading to the clubâs complaints.
Geelong Environment Council president Joan Lindros recommended a âthoroughâ investigation of the clubâs claims.
âItâs very unusual behaviour if kangaroos are digging up the greens,â she said.
âI think an expert needs to be consulted to investigate why this is happening.â
Ms Lindros was confident the army would make the right decision on solving the issue.
âI personally think itâs very pleasant to have kangaroos on a golf course.
âItâs been suggested that itâs a big problem but I think they really need professional advice before they do anything to the kangaroos.â
The Defence Department did not return the Independents call for comment before the paper went to press.