Where the Bison roam (attack in gun free utopia)

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gunsmith

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Maybe it didn't like being called a buffalo :rolleyes:

Article said that http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/sports/6331005.htm
they are more dangerous then grizzly!:eek:

OUTDOOR RECREATION
Bison incident a painful reminder for park visitors
By Ray Sasser
Knight Ridder

Thirty-year-old Jeff Bunch of Dallas has some advice for those who may be traveling in national parks this summer. Watch out for the bison. According to the Aberdeen American News in South Dakota, Bunch suffered a deep puncture wound to his left buttock July 6 and underwent surgery to remove an inch-long splinter of bison horn.

Three days later, he had been released from Rapid City Regional Hospital. Bunch and family had apparently resumed their memorable, if frightening, vacation.

Bunch was touring Custer State Park with his mother, Deanna, and brothers, David and Brian, all of Dallas, when the attack occurred. According to the South Dakota newspaper, the family was driving in a rented minivan and stopped to watch a herd of bison near the road.

Jeff Bunch told the newspaper that he was standing near the open driver's door about 20 to 25 feet from the nearest animal. "They looked so peaceful just grazing there," he said.

Bunch had unknowingly intruded on the bison's fight or flight space, and the animal decided to fight. Without warning, it lowered its head and charged, tossing Bunch into the side of the van.

Bunch likened the attack to being run over by an NFL linebacker with horns. Actually, a full-grown bison weighs about eight times as much as the average pro linebacker.

"I just want to get the word out to people about how dangerous buffalo are," Bunch told the newspaper. "I wouldn't wish this on anybody. Stay in the car and use binoculars."

Bunch's mishap was the second bison incident of the year at Custer State Park. On June 16, an unidentified motorcyclist was injured when he and his motorcycle were hooked and tossed by one of the big animals.

South Dakota is not the only vacation destination where visitors may encounter bison. Wichita Mountains National Wildlife Refuge in Oklahoma has a free-ranging herd of the big, woolly critters, and the Oklahoma bison have also caused human damage.

The most famous bison herd is in Yellowstone National Park, which is also known for free-ranging grizzly bears. Guess which of the two species is more dangerous? If you said bison, treat yourself to a private viewing of "Dances With Wolves."

Despite Yellowstone signs that warn park visitors about the buffalo, I once saw a group of camera-toting tourists surround a bull bison that was bedded beside the road. They formed a complete circle around the bull. Luckily, it lay quietly chewing its cud. It could just as easily have jumped up and trampled the nearest bystander.

Jeff Bunch merely underestimated the speed at which a bison can react. Because the park animals are so visible, many people seem to think they're tame. Animals that live in a park become habituated to people. That doesn't make the animals safer. It makes them more dangerous.

They're dangerous because they've lost their inherent fear of humans. Park animals are not tame, but are unpredictable. One second, a moose, elk, bison, bear, mountain sheep or deer is casually minding its own business.

Accidentally come between the animal and its baby, however, or simply cross an imaginary line that only the animal understands, and there could be an instant transformation from a gentle forest creature to the incredible hulk. Animals use body language to convey their feelings, but their subtle dialect is foreign to most humans.

For many animals, a direct stare from a member of the herd is tantamount to a threat or a challenge. Looking a bison directly in the eye may be all it takes to set him off. I once watched a photographer in Yellowstone ignore the obvious aggression displays of a bull elk. The photographer kept edging closer and eventually had to run as the bull lowered its antlers and came for him.

Running away is the correct response to a charging herbivore. A herbivore is only interested in removing you from its space. Never run from a bear, a mountain lion or any other carnivore. Running is what their prey does, and a carnivore may be encouraged to chase you.
 
Probably the same type of person who would then drive over to Yellowstone and try to feed/pet the "cute little bear" :rolleyes:

Greg
 
Jeff Bunch told the newspaper that he was standing near the open driver's door about 20 to 25 feet from the nearest animal. "They looked so peaceful just grazing there," he said.
red.jpg


I think we all know what Red would say to this particular mouth-breather...
 
I used to live in Gillette, Wyoming for two years.

That's only about a 2 hour drive from where this attack happened. I've been on that very stretch
of highway several times.

First, anyone with half a brain should realize that bison are not merely "big hairy cows."

Second, up and down this stretch of road are huge signs, I mean like 10 feet wide by 5 feet high, with big yellow letters on them which say, in all capital letters:

BISON ARE DANGEROUS ANIMALS. DO NOT APPROACH

In fact, in a couple of spots, those big signs are combined with huge orange flashing lights, just in case any folks with high subtlety tolerances don't quite notice the signs.

hillbilly
 
Malone;

Don't recall the original post specifying that the motorcyclist injured by the buffalo was a dirt biker. Apparantly no motorcyclist has a right to the road from the tone of your post.

Then there is the legacy of the past 'roadless area' Federal edict. One weekend go biking in the woods. Next weekend there's a berm across the road & a sign that says the area is roadless. Notwithstanding that the road on the other side of the berm is the same one that was there last weekend. Or that it's still perfectly obvious that it's there to any who care to observe it. Our Lords & Masters in Washington D.C. decree that thou shalt not have multiple use & that's that. I sure didn't get to vote on it. And yes, I do vote.

So dirt biker's abuse the artificial rules. It may not be right, but it is certainly understandable. Where's the nearest designated riding area to your forest? How big is it? Since you seem to be happy enough to use the tax money motorcycle sales generate to maintain a Federal forest, what provisions have you proposed to make the issue equitable?

How now green cow?
900F
 
What gets me is, everybody KNOWS bulls are dangerous. And those are "domestic" supposedly :rolleyes:. These are basically a bigger, hairier version of the same concept, and *wild*.

So he figures they're harmless :eek:.

Holy crap.
 
Anything to keep the #%*& dirt bikers on the trails.
Apparantly no motorcyclist has a right to the road from the tone of your post.

I have to side with Malone on this one (as much as it pains me :) )

Malone said he wants to keep bikers ON the trails - he didn't say anything about keeping them OFF of a road (presumably a road also qualifies as some sort of trail).

There are places in MT where the USFS is actually fixing up the trails for ATVs and trail bikes.

I have seen the damage "trail bikes" (they call 950cc a trail bike?) can do, and back when I was still logging, if we did that kind of damage we would be in horrible trouble. But the bikers get a free ride because they are "recreationists".

Still, there is no reason IMO for many of the road closures, other than to assert authority over us peasants, and so the district ranger can prove that he (she) has some sort of management plan.

And on topic ... don't fool around with mother nature's children :D
Some of them are bigger than you.
 
In 1996 in Yellowstone I saw about the same thing. There was a parking area near Madison (I think) with a stand of trees and an open area just beyond. In the open area was a herd of about 15 bison. I was in the tree area taking pictures of the bison with about a dozen other people. Then an intrepid doofus walked out into the open and set his camera mounted tripod down about six feet from a bison. When the camera snapped the bison moved away. The Darwin nominee followed. The next time he snapped a photo the bison lunged sideways and put him on the ground. It then moved away and resumed eating. He got up laughing and picked up his camera and walked back to the trees where his buddies were also laughing it up. He was lucky. Unfortunately there was no ranger nearby.
 
Tallpine;

Been to Custer State Park & seen the buffalo? I have been there & done that. There are no off road trails. None. Ergo, the biker involved was on a road bike, with plate, street legal, or he couldn't get through the park entrance.

Therefore Malone certainly seems, to me, to be condeming all motorcyclists to satisfy his pet peeve.

Let's take a look at the other side of the coin. When the Phantom Duck of the Desert organized the last legal, approved, Barstow-to-Vegas race, the course went under I-10. So there was a very abrupt transition from bright desert sun to dense shade. No way for a rider's eyes to adapt. Mere minutes before the racers were to pass under the Interstate, alert course workers checked the tunnels. And they found railroad ties with many spikes hung from the roof. Nice guys, these protesters, huh?

The attitude seems to be; 'you ride where it offends me, I wish you serious injury or death'. An entirely unsupportable attitude IMHO. No wonder threads crop up here from time to time considering the ability to carry or shoot from a motorcycle.

900F
 
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