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View Full Version : Anyone here been charged by an animal?


T Bone
12-20-2002, 06:36 PM
Been reading Death in the Long Grass by Capstick. Excellent reading! I don't know if I could hold it together if a lion, elephant, or buff charged.

Has anyone here been charged by a critter?

I know Moosie was charged by a skunk, and barely made it out alive!

AZHUNTERR
12-20-2002, 09:35 PM
i had a run in with a javlina before i killed it

Goat
12-21-2002, 10:07 AM
Had a short run in with a mature bull elephant. Not sure what he had in mind as I didn't stick around long enough for the conclusion.

Worst thing I ever had run at me was a griz. Can't see the dang thing all the time but the noise and bear just getting close fast!! Not cool!!

goat

FLIPPER
12-21-2002, 11:31 AM
Had a goat one time back up to a stump...really fast....while I was standing on it :D

Elkhunter
12-21-2002, 08:21 PM
I had a dog charge me once until he reached the end of the chain :D

Goat
12-21-2002, 08:31 PM
Gotta watch them goats Flipper!!

goat

JJHACK
12-21-2002, 08:42 PM
When I was working in the bear research and damage prevention program for the Weyerhaeuser Corporation and the Washington Fish and Wildlife Department in Western Washington, I had 60 feeding stations to maintain on about 380 thousand acres bordering the Alpine Lakes Wilderness in the Cascades of Washington state. The reason we had feeding stations for black bears is another story altogether. I will just say for now that we were doing work on tree damage prevention by offering a supplemental food source for part of each spring when natural foods were limited.

I would make three trips each week maintaining approximately 20 stations per trip. One day while making the rounds of feed stations my daughter who was about 5 years old fell and cut her knee pretty bad. She was stressed out and nothing I could do would pacify her need to go home. I found some candy bars in the truck, and gave her some soda. The sugar rush helped for the time being and I really needed to get through the remaining stations so I would not screw up my schedule for the next set of feeding stations.

I did not want to drive all the way out of the woods and have to come all the way back to finish. My daughter was a good sport working with me, as it was all she really knew in her life. We were out working with the bears together nearly every day. I would just strap her into the car seat and pack a lunch and away we would go for the whole day.

Because she was hurt and sore I knew she wanted to go home, she always wanted to visit the feeding stations to look at the claw marks on the trees and look for bear tracks in the mud. She was learning to be quite the little tracker and outdoorsmen. Today was much different because of her injured knee, she did not want to go out of the truck. There were some really steep or brushy stations that were dangerous or too difficult for her so she would sit in the truck and watch the road for bears. The deal was if she saw a bear to beep the horn in the truck so I knew there was a bear nearby. This actually happened several times but was not a normal occurrence.

Because of her little injury I was really hurrying to get done and trying to finish before her "sugar rush" wore off. We had about 4 stations to go when she started with the “I want to go home now” suggestions. She really had no choice in the matter but I certainly did not want her to hate doing this with me, so I agreed to hurry through the last 4 stations if she would help me. I even reminded her that feeding station number 1 was her favorite because we often saw bears there. Especially the one-eared bear that she thought was really funny looking. I never let her out of the truck at station #1 because the bears there were everyplace and the one-eared bear had been getting more and more bold each week through the spring and summer.


When we arrived at the last station I reminded her about using the horn and “keeping an eye on the road”. I grabbed a 50 pound sack of our specail "Land O lakes" bear chow and headed into the woods about 50 yards to fill the feeding station. It was really rainy, typical of this time of year. The trail into the location was very slippery in several places and because I was in a hurry I almost fell a couple times. I opened up the feeder and poured the bag in, not nearly enough to fill the drum. I reset the motion sensing game counter, exchanged the film in the motion camera and ran out to the truck for another sack of feed. I told her I would be right back and ran up the hill to the feeder to put in this final bag.

With my mind on getting home to fire up the wood stove an making something for dinner I was coming around a steep and slippery section of the path when I was hit so hard from behind I lost all my breath. I actually heard something but with the bag over my shoulder I never saw what happened. The bag flies into the air landing right next to my head. At that exact instant I realized a bear was on my back and I was suffocating with the air knocked out of me and the weight of this bear was on top of me. I am now, and was then a pretty fit guy, but working to get out from under this bear was pointless. He had me down and there was nothing I was going to do. He was biting me in the back around the shoulders and neck. One paw was on my head and pushing it down into the mud. I was still struggling to breathe and decided I needed to somehow get my Ruger Redhawk out and resolve this problem.

I could not move a muscle without getting bit again and again. My thoughts turned to my daughter who would certainly come looking for me and would also be attacked and killed for sure. Even if the bear left me what would I look like when she found my body? What panic would set in for her? What would a very young child do with a dismembered parent alone in the woods? These hundreds of thoughts go through your mind like the bullet train, one whizzing thought flying through your head after another.

That was probably the single scariest moment of my life. I was terrified she would come looking for me, I needed to do something but was completely helpless to get up. This was really a horrifying situation. Then as quick as I was knocked down the bear jumped off and ran into the bush, I briefly caught a glimpse that he had only one ear. I was in shock for several seconds sitting up and trying to get my wind back. I felt like taking out the Revolver and throwing it as far as I could. What a worthless piece of dead weight I had been lugging through the woods for many years. The one time I really needed it, I can’t put it into action! Then I heard the horn of the truck blowing and my daughter yelling out the window that the bear with one ear was in the road. “Hurry up papa, he is leaving.” I am not an exceptionally religious guy, I believe in God but am not an extremely religious church going person. I guarantee you this though; no one is an atheist when a bear attack is occurring!


I eventually got to my feet and filled the feeding station. I went back to the truck trying to clean off my face and hair with my shirt. I was really choked up, knowing how close I was to losing my daughter and my own life, it was difficult to remain calm and un-emotional about what just happened. When I arrived at the truck my daughter stated sharply, “What took you so long, you missed the one eared bear, he was standing in the road, didn’t you hear me beeping the horn? --- What happened to you? How come your so muddy, what happened to your face? Are you okay, what happened to your shirt?

She was like some kind of semi-auto question machine, those of you with children can probably relate. I explained what took place and that I was okay and we could go home now. Of course at this point she wanted to stay and go shoot the bear. Going home and allowing the bear to run free was just unacceptable. We did however go home. As it turned out I had massive bruising on my back and neck; many of the bruises on my head and neck look like shoestring licorice in purple. I had many long purple blood blister type marks from the claws. The claws did not break the skin. My heavy carhart jacket has holes in the back from the bites; I feel it saved me from much worse injuries. There was a minimum of blood; the biggest fear was my very difficult breathing, and the injuries I would find when the adrenaline wore off and when the mud was cleaned off. I was for more sore and miserable in the days to follow as the bruising and swelling became worse.

I took an F&W employee out several times who really wanted to shoot a bear. We eventually shot the one-eared bear. I have it shoulder mounted in my shop. He was a 2.5-year-old male that weighed 210 pounds. The most “typical” problem bears.

www.huntingadventures.net (http://www.huntingadventures.net)

<FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE="1">[ 12-21-2002 21:44: Message edited by: JJHACK ]</font>

Moosie
12-21-2002, 08:48 PM
JJ... Good to see ya again and read more of your stories !!!!

T Bone
12-21-2002, 08:51 PM
JJHack,
Wow, good post. I'm glad you and the daughter made it out OK.

2fastnaz
12-27-2002, 05:12 PM
JJ thank you so much for sharing that story.

Nut
12-27-2002, 05:32 PM
JJ thanks for sharing the story and your thoughts. Glad that everything worked out for the best.

csutton7
12-27-2002, 08:10 PM
yikes--great story and am sure glad it worked out--chris

YoungRobinHood
12-27-2002, 09:05 PM
That was one of the best storys that I have ever read anywhere JJHACK. Thank you for sharing that story with us.

<FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE="1">[ 12-28-2002 15:45: Message edited by: YoungRobinHood ]</font>

trophy_killer
12-27-2002, 10:46 PM
Great story JJHACK!!

tnctcb
12-28-2002, 08:01 AM
when i took my son hog hunting this summer i got charger by a hog but i think it was trying to get away from my boys rifle more than trying to get me.

Ithaca 37
01-04-2003, 08:41 PM
Moosie saved my life a couple of years ago when we were being charged by a ground squirrel! He got it with his .22!

I've had moose and bears take menacing steps towards me, but they didn't actually charge and try to get me. They had cubs or calves with them.

One of the scariest things I've had happen was when I shot a nice big five point buck about 50 yards away and he took off running right straight at me. He was hit thru the heart and was dead on his feet but could still run as fast as any deer. He was weaving back and forth trying to keep his balance and his head was down and the antlers were pointed right at me. I knew he didn't even know where he was going, but I couldn't tell either because he was getting wobbly as he got closer. I stepped behind a tree and he went by me about three feet away and hit the ground thirty feet past me!

Don't misunderstand me---he wasn't charging me and didn't have any idea what he was doing. It was just one of those reactions when a deer is heart shot and they run a ways. But it all happened so fast and he came so close he could have run into me by accident!

Then, if they ever found me, the headlines would have said, "Hunter and Big Buck Kill Each Other!" and nobody would have known what really happened! smilies/biggrin.gif

<FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE="1">[ 01-04-2003 21:44: Message edited by: Ithaca 37 ]</font>

Calif. Hunter
01-13-2003, 05:05 PM
I've been charged by hogs a few times. A few times, just because I was in their way or it was the only way through the brush. A couple of times, it was because they wanted to hurt me back. But nothing as dramatic as JJ's great story!

Elkhunter
01-14-2003, 06:07 AM
JJ, that was one hell of a great story. I am glad you are still around to tell it.

ELKCHSR
01-14-2003, 06:57 AM
!!!!WOW!!!!
That was a super story and you lived to share it with us, that is even better..Thanks and double thanks!!!!
The worst scare I had was elk deer hunting in the cascades and came around a corner to find myself not thirty yards from a sow and three cubs, she was lying down with them playing with her, I think that is why she didn't hear me comming. I was still looking over my shoulder for a couple miles after sneaking out of there...Great story JJHACK!!!

JJHACK
01-14-2003, 09:34 AM
Thanks, guys! I hesitate to post some of the longer stories but I know like you folks I enjoy reading a well written factual story about hunting every chance I get! There is another one here now I wrote a year ago or so. About American lion hunting. Hope you enjoy it as well.

FEW
01-14-2003, 10:31 AM
JJ awesome story. Your daughter is a brave girl for wanting to stay and kill the bear.

I have been charged by Javelina but once they get close enough to see you they usually back off. Not too scary...

DaleT
01-20-2003, 06:59 AM
That bear story is in a league above this, but the scariest thing I have run into was on a rattlesnake hunting trip. We were working a new den that we had just found and we had seen a pretty good sized snake at the entrance. It took us about 10 minutes to get set up and as soon as we shot the gas in the den, there was an immediate buzz and within a few seconds this big rattle snake comes out quick strait at my buddy. This is fairly unusual, because they usally set in there for at least 15 minutes and get pretty drunk from the fumes. They usually creep out real slow trying to be undetected. Back to the story, my budy grabs the snake with his catcher and it goes ballistic, it starts flailing in the air and shooting venom out all over us. Some gets in my eye and it immediatly starts burning like when you accidentally rub Jalepinos in your eye. So I am not much help at that point. Then the snake wraps it's self around the catcher and starts inch worming it'sway up the handle towards his hands. It's biting and spraying venom the whole time. He starts yelling at me to get my shit together and grab this snake before it bites him. I close the one bad eye, grab the snake with my catcher and keep it from getting any closer to him. we get it over the the cage and it's flailing so much we can't get it through the door. When we finally did, it at had left marks on the box where it had bitten the top 7 different times. Once we get the door closed, I ran back to the pick-up and got a bottle of water and washed my eye out. When I got back my buddy was just speachless, and you could see the goose bumps on him from about 15 feet away. All he said was,"did you see that thing". It was pretty intense.


Another time wasn't scary for me, but it was the first & last time my wife went snake hunting with me. We were set up in this real tight spot next to a creek. Those snakes were real receptive to gas and we caught 26 in about 15 minutes. They were coming out of 5 different holes some were at our feet and some were at eye level. We had less that 10 feet of working room, and Tracy couldn't get any further back or she would be in the creek, if the water hadn't been so cold I am sure she would have been out in it. Yes, I had to do a lot PR work after that.

tnctcb
01-20-2003, 09:14 AM
dale thats a great story too. i have been closer than i would have liked to a rattler more than once. anyone who hunts them with a stick is just plain crazy, you are my hero man. i would love to try that sometime ummm maybe start with garter snakes first for practice

danr55
01-20-2003, 10:04 AM
A long time ago, I had this red headed girl friend who was a real animal..... and I just got rid of a wife who liked to charge.... Does any of that count??

smilies/cool.gif

ELKCHSR
01-20-2003, 06:30 PM
LMAO Dan!!!
That was a great story Dale.. smilies/biggrin.gif

Elkhunter
01-21-2003, 05:31 AM
Good story Dale smilies/smile.gif
I think it should classify by all means Dan smilies/wink.gif smilies/tongue.gif