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Author Topic: Spear Mt lion Save Girlfriend  (Read 1072 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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:reporter; Man Uses Spear to Save Girlfriend from Mountain Lion :popcorn:  Sept. 15,
 
Mountain lions rarely attack humans unprovoked, but can be a formidable danger if they choose to do so.

It is perhaps North America’s first recorded case of a spear being used to kill a cougar in self-defense. A British Columbia resident is being hailed as a hero after he used the tool to save his common-law partner from a mountain lion near their home on the remote Flores Island on Sunday. According to The Globe and Mail, the 60-year-old woman was being mauled in her garden when the as-of-yet unidentified man heard her screams. Officials say that the man took up a spear, likely made for boar hunting, and stabbed the large cat several times. The mountain lion ran off and the man was able to procure help for his injured girlfriend.

“That’s a significant amount of bravery that he showed,” Conservation officer Ben York told The Globe and Mail. “I understand why he did it, but it still takes a lot of bravery to do what he did and I’m glad he was there to rescue her. You know it could have turned out a lot differently if he hadn’t been around.”

Early reports indicate that the woman’s wounds are significant, including puncture marks from powerful bites and heavy damage to the victim’s scalp. Part of her scalp was also reportedly crushed during the attack. She underwent surgery and is expected to recover.

After the incident conservation officers scoured the surrounding countryside in search of the animal. With the help of a cougar hunter, they found the animal’s carcass a short distance away from the house. It appeared to have died from the spear-inflicted wounds. The man says he had seen the mountain lion prowling near his house and was becoming increasingly bold over the last several months. Other residents of island told The Vancouver Sun they had also seen the large cat in the vicinity.

“Me and another guy saw what we thought was a wolf or a dog in the bay and we went to check it out,” said Bill Dennis, who encountered what he believes is the same animal near a local channel. “I got within 100 feet of the float and it jumped out of the water like a fish and I thought ‘Holy crap, that’s a cougar.’”

Dennis said the cougar chased him and his friend for short distance before disappearing.

Officials say the dead cougar was a three-year-old male and an investigation is undergoing to find out what made it aggressive towards humans on the island.

File image courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
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