Couple use a POWER TOOL to engrave their names on national landmark

Loved-up couple use a POWER TOOL to engrave their names on sacred rock – infuriating locals who say Aboriginals use the landmark for ceremonies

  • Couple carved names at Mount Ngungun, in the QLD Glass House Mountains
  • Damian ‘Wildman’ Duffy blasted the ‘environmental vandalism’ in angry video
  • The wildlife warrior called on anyone who knew the couple to let him know 
  • Do you know this couple? Email [email protected] 

A mystery couple who carved their names into a rock at the top of a sacred mountain has been scolded for their senseless vandalism.

The pair used an angle grinder to imprint their names inside a large love heart on top of Mount Ngungun, in Queensland’s Glass House Mountains.

Damian ‘Wildman’ Duffy encountered the ‘environmental vandalism’ on a recent expedition and uploaded a video of himself blasting the move to Facebook.

Beneath the names ‘Rach and Tys’ was Saturday’s date, November 3, 2018, meaning the vandals had committed the brazen defacing just days beforehand

‘Some f***ers have decided to bring a battery-powered angle grinder up here and grind their f***ing names into the rock,’ he said in the video. 

Beneath the names ‘Rach and Tys’ was Saturday’s date, November 3, 2018, meaning the vandals had committed the brazen defacing just days before.


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‘If anyone knows who these d***heads are let me know because I’ll send them a nice little message and maybe pass on their information to parks and wildlife because that is environmental vandalism you f**heads.’

‘Have a bit of respect for where you are and maybe grow a brain, get f*****.’ 

Damian ‘Wildman’ Duffy (pictured) encountered the ‘environmental vandalism’ on a recent expedition and uploaded a video of himself blasting the move to Facebook 

The Queensland Department of Environment and Science described the area as a ‘special meeting place where many Aboriginal people gathered for ceremonies and trading’.

‘This place is considered spiritually significant with many ceremonial sites still present and protected today,’ it stated on its website. 

The department said it took such acts of vandalism seriously and called on anyone with information on the culprits to contact them. 

The Queensland Department of Environment and Science described the area (pictured) as a ‘special meeting place where many Aboriginal people gathered for ceremonies and trading’

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