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Teacher Killed by Wolves!

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7:30 pm
March 12, 2010


OutdoorFrontiers

Whitlock, TN

Admin

posts 1440

1

Well, I knew it was just a matter of time before this happened.  With the wolf population expanding in the lower 48, especially in Wisconsin and Minnesota, it's only a matter of time before the problem comes a little closer to home.  And then what will the pro-wolf people say?

Steve Huber Editor in Chief/Executive Producer OutdoorFrontiers Multi-Media

6:07 pm
March 12, 2010


lilmule

Buchanan,Tn

Member

posts 1447

2

1/2 doz of these 55-60 pd coyotes from around here would worry me,as they have little fear of man,just distaste.

Theres no doubt in my mind if you cornered one he would go through you,not around you.

Last year while driving hit my brakes hard to avoid killing what I saw a a blurr as a german sheppard,at one point it was by my right headlight,that close, it kept on running and looked back and snarled.

In this case a woman whose scent is more prominent at certain times of the year and a jogger,it would be fairly easy for them to assume a hunting posture,after a fleeing animal.

I do hope afa tracks them down and eliminates them. 

7:37 am
March 12, 2010


OutdoorFrontiers

Whitlock, TN

Admin

posts 1440

3

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) – A schoolteacher found dead this week near a remote Alaska village was probably killed by wolves, Alaska State Troopers said on Thursday.

The fatal attack could be the first on U.S. soil in more than 50 years. Attacks by wild wolves, rather than wolves kept as pets, are extremely rare, numbering no more than a handful a decade, mostly in Canada and Russia.

Candice Berner, a 32-year-old teacher and avid jogger who traveled to several rural schools in Alaska, was found dead on Monday along a road near Chignik Lake, a Native Alutiiq village about 475 miles southwest of Anchorage.

Snowmobilers found her severely mauled body in a pool of blood and multiple wolf tracks in the snow, according to officials. The State Medical Examiner said the cause of death was "multiple injuries due to animal mauling."

Chignik Lake locals had expressed fears about wolf sightings in the area, state troopers said. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game plans a special meeting to hear their concerns.

State troopers said there were no records of deadly wolf maulings in Alaska. Bruce Woods, spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said fatal attacks are extremely rare worldwide.

Steve Huber Editor in Chief/Executive Producer OutdoorFrontiers Multi-Media



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