Crooked Mick is a larger-than-life character from Australian oral tradition, emerging during the era of the
swagmen, and
sheep shearing. A sort of Australian analogue to
Paul Bunyan, he is always associated with the Speewah; only appearing in stories set in the Speewah . Crooked Mick, like his
American Wild West counterparts, is a giant of a man and skilled in many trades. Equally hard-working and playful, he is quick-witted and has an appetite to match his unusual size. Crooked Mick is regarded as the
quintessential bushman. Nothing was beyond him; he was said to have been capable of a number of impossible or difficult feats (for example, lifting huge weights, shearing a large number of sheep in a short period of time, baking
pies so light that a gust of wind would carry them, kicking
crocodiles up to the moon, and moving mountains) . The reason behind the "
Crooked" in his name, while always a physical feature, varied from story to story, with explanations including having one eye higher than the other, a twisted nose due to a crocodile attack, or misshapen teeth (due to a habit of biting the skin of the sheep he ate). Most commonly, however, it was due to possessing a "crooked" walk: a
limp from being
ringbarked when he was a teenager or a bent leg from an incident with a water trough . Crooked Mick's vital status varies based on storyteller; a common format followed when telling stories about Crooked Mick is for the teller to describe several conflicting explanations for Crooked Mick's death and then provide the "real" story . ==References==