The Big Ram, Karoonda, South Australia

Ay Caramba, lovers of Big Things! Is me, El Grande Gonzales, greatest luchador in all México and Latin America’s leading expert on oversized roadside attractions. Hola!

You may look at mi beautiful smile, mi carefree disposition, and conclude that Gonzales is a happy hombre. But there is sadness deep within mi corazón. Bashing in the brains of mi enemies has been a lot of fun – and certainly profitable! – but it was a desperate attempt to transfer a poofteenth of my internal agony onto someone else.

Lo siento, Santiego Ortiz, it seems I give you spinal damage for nothing – oopsie daisy! But I become distracted from my tale of woe.

Muchos años ago, a sheep wander into mi village and eat mi mamá. Then he eat mi papi. Then he eat mi quesadillas, and this is when I get mucho furioso. And you no want to see Gonzales when he is furioso… well, I’ve been told I’m super cute when I’m angry, but I also get a bit stabby. This is why I am banned from Taco Bell.

Well, that and the incident with the cheese sauce.

Since this atrocity, Gonzales has wandered the Earth looking for the sheep that eat mi familia. First, I encounter The Big Merino in Goulburn, but he is too large. Then I find The Big Cow in Highfields, which is a bit like a sheep but also kinda different. How should I know, Gonzales am professional fighter, not veterinarian.

OK, I sometimes work as a veterinarian, but México’s accreditations are notoriously lax. Last week I accidentally neuter Cat Stevens and give an actual cat a guitar and force him to play Moonshadow. Is easy mistake to make, and the cat really nailed it – ¡Ay Caramba!

On the Ram-page

But I go off the track like mi tío Miguel when he drink too much tequila and drive his lowrider into cactus. Is very sad – this cactus have one day till retirement!

I hear word that the sheep who eat mi familia has been seen in South Australia. I take mi tag team parter, El Gordón, and we travel by donkey to Karoonda, deep in the outback. Is a long journey, but there is restaurant serving jalapeño poppers on the way, so all is well.

Karoonda is nice town with wide streets and pretty women. It reminds me of mi village back in México, with less tuberculosis. But El Gordón and Gonzales are not here to sightsee, we are here to take vengeance on a horrible sheep. This cobarde try to hide from us, but we shall find him even if we have to overturn every table and threaten every granny in – oh, there he is, right in the centre of town! He was actually pretty easy to find, as he is two metres tall.

He also have huge set of el testículos and – holy guacamole! – what hombre wouldn’t be attracted to them? Wowzers!

Skip to this section if you just want to read about The Big Ram, and not the adventures of a deranged, yet loveable, luchador

The sheep who eat mi familia has developed for himself a clever cover story. He claims to be The Big Ram, a South Australian icon and the centrepiece of Karoonda’s b-ewe-ming tourism industry. According to his lies – which he has even had inscribed into a plaque beside his rump – the idea for The Big Ram came from a señor Don Anderson, who wanted to cash in on the success of nearby Big Things such as The Big Orange and The Big Pelican.

The sculpture was built by a señor Andrew Stock, with help from some of the more artistic members of the community. The Big Ram was unveiled in ungu-late 1997 at a cost of 12,000 pesos, with local kiddies adding a tiled mosaic to the statue’s base in 2001. He is of good quality, and certainly not sheep and nasty.

Apparently, more than 650 hours of work went into the baa-sterpiece, along with 18 tonnes of stone sourced from shear-by quarries. But that’s just the sort of mierda story a familia-guzzling renegade ram would hide behind, isn’t it? You cannot put your wool onto my eyes, you big baby!

They really should’ve named him Jean-Claude Van Ram

Tears streaming down mi face, I storm up to the rascally ruminant and spit out the palabras I’ve dreamed of for eons.

“Hola,” I rasped, whilst gesturing flamboyantly for dramatic effect. “Mi nombre is El Grande Gonzales. You eat mi father. Prepare to die.”

The good gringos of Karoonda, who had encircled us, gasped as one. Gonzales clench his fists. The match of the century was about to begin

Somewhere, in the distance, a lone cassowary cawed.

I may be the most feared fighter in all of México, but it was El Gordón who threw the first punch. Teehee, you should’ve seen the hombrecito go! He kicked and he bit and he spat and he slapped until finally, slick with sweat and covered in blood, he fell to the ground.

The sheep, he show no signs of being in a fight at all, and just stand there smiling. I take off mi shirt, adjust mi jockstrap, and prepare to rush in. But then I am struck by sudden realisation. Just like when mi tío Paco was struck by a sudden VW Beetle whilst dancing in the street. This event cost him his dream of winning México’s Got Talent.

“Mi familia was not eaten by a sheep at all!” I exclaimed, as the townsfolk went ‘Ooooh!’ in unison. “They move to a beachside villa in Cancún, where they make a comfortable living selling NFTs to chubby American tourists. I even visit them last summer, is a nice place. Mi life has been spent travelling the globe, putting livestock into headlocks for nothing!”

I cradled El Gordón, who was really quite seriously injured, in my muscular arms. We posed for some super cute selfies with The Big Ram, signed autographs for the understandably starstruck townsfolk, and said our farewells to Karoonda.

“That place that sells the jalapeño poppers is still open, right?” asked a weary El Gordón.

“Sí, señor.” And with that, we rode our donkey off into the sunset.

2 thoughts on “

  1. G’day Bigs. My name is Jarvis and I am a huge fan of this website and bigs in general. You see I grew up in Goulburn, home of the Big Merino which was a favourite place of mine to visit. After 10 years in Goulburn I moved to the Sunshine Coast where I have met the Big Pineapple, Matilda, Pete the Pelican and many more and I’ve been on dozens of adventures from Cairns to Melbourne seeing every Big in between. On my recent trip, I saw many that I recommend you one day visit, such as the Big Crab in Cardwell, the Big Banana in Mackay and the Big Marlin in Cairns. I also recommend possibly starting posts on art trails involving statues and Big things. For example, in Kurandah, west of Cairns, there is a art trail supporting Cassowary awareness with 6 life sized statues around town painted by local indigenous artists. There is also the Dinosaur trail through Winton, Richmond and Hughenden where you’ll meet the Big Kronosaurus at Kronosaurus Korner and the Big Muttaburrasaurus in Hughenden, where you’ll also meet the big Rainbow Serpent (even though it is silver) and other dinosaur related artworks. There are also sculptures scattered around the coast of Queensland. I was lucky enough to meet Airlie Beaches Big Dugong as well as the fish sculptures at Cairns and a Stingray next to it. I hope you’ve enjoyed my recommendations as well as reading about my journey with the Bigs.
    From your fellow Bigs enthusiast
    Jarvis

    1. Greetings Jarvis, thank you so much for joining me here in the Land of the Bigs. I really appreciate your message and am touched by your admiration and deference for the Bigs. Make yourself comfortable, this is your home, too 🤗

      You’re so lucky to have grown up in the shadow of the Big Merino. Oh, the adventures you must’ve had! I was actually in Goulburn to watch over his relocation in 2007. I hope you were there too, as it’s a memory most locals still relish.

      If only cretins would stop taking photos of his testicles! It’s absolutely disgusting I’m currently lobbying the local council to make it an offence punishable by public whipping.

      I had planned a visit to North Queensland in 2021, in order to lavish my attention upon many of the Bigs you mentioned. Three glorious months I would spend, caressing the Cassowary, admiring the Avocado, and gawping at the Gum Boot. Then life got in the way and I had to settle down with a job and a family and a mortgage and adult responsibilities.

      Oh, who am I kidding? I’ve been swanning around the world, cuddling up to Big Things from México to Manchester and taking more photos than Albo – teehee!

      I’ve even become the Ambassadora de Bigs for Guatemala – I still can’t even point the place out on a map, but those little guys go bonkers for roadside attractions!

      Anyway, I’d love to see photos of you frolicking with all those incredible Bigs, and hope we bunp into each other beside a massive mango sometime

      Keep thinking BIG,
      Your friend Bigs Bardot

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