Urban Gorilla Hunt

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gimlet1/21

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I was at the Riverbanks Zoo in Columbia,SC the other day with my wife and 5 kids, armed with my PF-9 loaded w/147 gr Hydra-shocks JHPs, when the 400 lbs gorilla escaped; yet was on the wrong side of the park for the hunt of a lifetime!:banghead: It could have been a GREAT story to tell, with pics.

I wonder if I could have taken him down with 8 9mm HPs, because not thirty minutes prior we were over there taking pics with them through the glass wall.:what: attached

I would even have taken the beating that the snack shack guy got, just for the story. Imagine being able to say you were beat-up by a mountain gorilla:D Better yet, I bagged a gorilla in downtown Columbia and here's the pics to prove it:D

What could they have said or done if I had shot him? I'd have just been protecting my wife and kids from a dangerous amimal.:neener:
 

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Wonder if they would have let you stuff and mount him? (Never realized how, ummm, dirty that sounds until I typed it out. Maybe taxidermied would be a better word, if that's even a real word.)

I love Riverbanks zoo. Reminds me of when we used to swim in the river when i was going to USC. 14 stitches, right foot, broken beer bottle, first week of freshman year.
 
Ya, as the beast came over the wall somebody walked out the back door of the snack shack and got pounced upon, they took him to the hospital and released him with scrapes and bruises. And one hell of a story to tell.
 
We were back in the botanical gardens by then and the staff wouldn't let us leave or tell us what was going on. Not to disparage the riverbank zoo, it is surprisingly good park.
 
So what do you think 9mm + gorilla? I've always said I'd take my chances with my 30-30 and a bear, but I don't know about this match-up.
 
released him with scrapes and bruises

that ape could have grabbed that guy and took off running and tear off a limb every 10 steps.

basically killed him instantly.

i wonder why it didnt.

it could have killed him really without even slowing down to do it.
 
i really think you would have a better chance just letting him rough you up like the snack guy.

i honestly think if the snack guy had a 9mm, and time to get a shot off, hed be dead
 
that ape could have grabbed that guy and took off running and tear off a limb every 10 steps.

basically killed him instantly.

i wonder why it didnt.

it could have killed him really without even slowing down to do it.


High five gone wrong?
 
Date Published: June 13, 2009
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Gorilla injures 1 during brief escape at Riverbanks



Photo provided
This is a 2004 file photo provided by The Riverbanks Zoo and Gardens of Mike, one of the three male gorillas they have at the zoo. Early reports blamed this gorilla for being the first to escape using a low hanging bamboo to climb out of his exhibit and injure a food service worker Friday in Columbia.

COLUMBIA (AP) – A 390-pound gorilla grabbed some low-hanging bamboo to scale a wall at a South Carolina zoo Friday, escaping his enclosure and tackling a worker before returning to his pen about five minutes later.

The gorilla at Riverbanks Zoo and Gardens ran into a pizza-stand employee who curled up and played dead to try to avoid further injuries, officials said. The man, who works for Aramark Corp., was taken to a hospital and released a short time later with cuts and bruises.

Zoo executive director Satch Krantz said the worker heard a strange sound, saw the gorilla outside the enclosure and turned to run.

"Then the gorilla did what gorillas do," he said.

The animal quickly closed the 30-foot gap between them and knocked the worker down. Two minutes later, the gorilla went over another wall and back into his enclosure.

"By then, the gorilla realized he was probably somewhere he shouldn't have been and wanted to go home," Krantz said.

The culprit is thought to be a 16-year-old western lowland gorilla named Mike, though zoo officials said they didn't know for certain. Three gorillas are in the exhibit.

Krantz praised the worker for doing the right thing. Neither he nor the company would identify the man.

Zoo officials said they were alerted to the escape by a bird-keeper who heard the commotion and the gorilla pounding on his own chest. About 340 people were ushered to indoor exhibits or outside the gates for about 45 minutes after the gorilla escaped, zoo officials said.

Krantz said employees reacted by the book and "it was an excellent job of preventing a more serious situation."

The gorilla got out about a half-hour after the zoo's 9 a.m. opening. He returned to the gated sleeping area connected to his outdoor enclosure, which is separated from the public by different barriers in different spots, including mesh and plexiglass.

A second gorilla, 15-year-old Kimya, also went inside the sleeping area after the escapee returned. It took another 40 minutes for workers to coax the zoo's oldest gorilla, 24-year-old Chaka, into the sleeping area.

Animal keepers patrol each enclosure every morning before opening the zoo and nothing looked out of the ordinary in the exhibit, Krantz said.

Officials believe a powerful rainstorm Thursday night swept a clump of bamboo over the top of the enclosure wall. Krantz showed reporters photos of a zoo worker using the slim bamboo reed to climb the wall and images of gorilla footprints on the wall.

"We learned something today," he said.

Krantz said zoo officials will check vegetation around exhibits to prevent further escapes. He said he thought the gorillas would be kept penned up – and not allowed into their outside enclosure – until at least next week.

Officials said the zoo's only other escape by a dangerous animal was in 1974, shortly after it opened, when a polar bear got out because of a worker's mistake. It was quickly recaptured.

Would the offending gorilla face punishment?

"We might not give him his snack tonight," Krantz said.
 
The grass is always greener on the other side, except for when it means being clobbered to death by a gorilla.

I'm saving this thread for future reference whenever a caliber war comes up.
 
Some of the older guys may remember this. Back when Ruger introduced the .44 mag carbine[late 60s?] they ran a ad in all the outdoor magazines of a guy who had shot a gorilla in Africa with one.Showed the dead gorilla hanging by his arms from a tree,with the happy hunter in front of it. I [11 years old] thought it was the coolest picture I had ever seen,but the anti hunters FREAKED over it. In fact I think Ruger withdrew the ad.
 
but the anti hunters FREAKED over it. In fact I think Ruger withdrew the ad.

Mountain Gorillas are an extremely endangered animal they shouldn't be hunted.

I worked in a zoo in FLA when I was younger ( The famous "Chimp Farm" of Tarpon Springs) my guess is the gorilla was just saying "hi" to the snack bar guy and didn't realize it's own strength.
 
Mountain Gorillas are an extremely endangered animal they shouldn't be hunted.

Agreed. But they were not nearly as endangered in the 60's when the Ruger ad appeared. And, for all we know, the gorilla in the ad may have been a Lowland Gorilla, which may still number over 200,000 in number today.

Habitat loss & poaching are the Mountain Gorillas major challenges today. They only number about 700 now. Believe it or not, their populations have actually increased over the past couple of decades.

I wish them well, but exploding human populations in their habitat areas may not bode well for their future. :(
 
gorilla might kill you if you gave him a really good reason, but a chimp would kill you for fun.
I also heard that a chimp will attack your privates and try to rip them off. Supposedly, when they fight each other in the wild that is what they do.
 
I also heard that a chimp will attack your privates and try to rip them off. Supposedly, when they fight each other in the wild that is what they do.

Now that would warrant a SD shooting!
 
The gorilla escaped for some pizza, then decided it wasn't good & went home.

I think it would have been a grave mistake trying to shoot a gorilla with a handgun, even a .45acp. A warning shot would most likely have a better result, if confronted by the beast.
 
The Stamford Police department had a hard time with the chimp. (You remember the Connecticut chimp, don't you!) I'm not sure what they are using for sidearms these days, but my first guess would be .45. They shot it several times and it ran off to die.

I think the gorilla would be tougher than a chimp.
 
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