Bison Attacks!

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Uploaded by on Jul 11, 2009

Three dumb girls walk up on a bison at Yellowstone National Park and almost get gored for their trouble. So stupid!

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Travel & Events

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  • likes, 6 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (conebaby)

  • @MrChessmove I'll repeat it for you, since you can't seem to read: the park disseminates warnings in many languages, including German. If that isn't enough, they give out a PICTORAL warning, depicting a hand-drawn bison tossing hand-drawn morons in the air. And if THAT isn't enough, doesn't common sense dictate one not approach a giant wild animal with HORNS in its natural habitat? Get outside once in awhile, mrchessmove, and interact--safely--with nature.

  • why would u not say somthing instead of sit in your car filming ???

  • @hemptrue For the eighty billionth time:

    1. The girls approached from the opposite direction & it would have required my yelling to get their attention. Drawing attention/starting the animal=not safe.

    2. THEY AREN'T MY KIDS. They got out of a car of adults. I'm not their parent. If I wanted to parent someone I'd have my own stupid kids.

    3. Yellowstone provides safety information upon entering the park. I'm not a park employee & it's not my job to inform or enforce park rules.

  • @conebaby it doesn't matter whether they are your kids or nor. the fact that you chose to sit in your seat shows how irresponsible person you are. someday when you need help and you wont get it you'll remember this well. what goes around comes around.

  • @alialimali Here's a brain teaser for you--maybe what was going around and coming around was going and coming at those girls. The fact that I chose to sit in my seat shows that I'm responsible and know how to follow park rules, and exhibit general wildlife common sense behavior. My chances of needing help are greatly reduced by understanding wildlife behavior, reading park rules, and taking proper precautions.

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  • @alialimali I am from Wyoming and live a few miles from Yellowstone. Those people were stupid and deserve to be gored. The warnings are posted in may languages and if people choose not to follow them then they need to learn the hard way. It is called natural selection....the strong and intelligent survive...the dumb and weak perish...pretty simple. I applaud the lady for not saying a word and the buffalo for scaring them..

  • Guile: BISOOOOON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!­!!(Flames)

  • nice video conebaby and ignore the trolls..must be feeding time for them

  • the sad thing is, mankind generally learns the hard way: either by being bent/broken/crushed, or by watching someone else get bent/broken/crushed. Notice the bison charging UPhill. Thanks for posting.

  • (cont) tree stumps removed, boulders and rocks removed from recreation sites, better law enforcement (never mind it would take more than a ranger per acre to have prevented the accident), more trees examined better (to keep them from falling on roads and in campgrounds) and even smoother walking surfaces wherever a person feels inclined to walk. Some of these situations could be partially mitigated, but not entirely. The stories I could tell and that I've heard or read about!

  • (cont) On what grounds do people file claims and sue when those claims are denied? The claim that government agency personnel are willfully negligent in not preventing injuries or fatalities. They assert that the injury would not have occurred if a fence were to be erected, more signs installed, avalanches prevented (I know, huh?), people physically watched full time and told not to climb over fences, higher fences built, trails located away from steep slopes (in the mountains?), (cont)

  • Believe it or not, when people do something like this and are injured or killed they or their survivors will file claims and when those are denied they will take the government to court. I've been deposed (called to be interviewed by the opposing counsel under oath) a dozen or so times and, on one occasion, attended a two week trial concerning an injury at one of the recreation sites I managed. I was on the stand for 12 hours over two days, then later for about 15 minutes. (cont)

  • @conebaby Number one is a very important point. This animal made a false charge, something that black bears often do, to keep these people from getting too close. If it had wanted to hurt them it would have. Their moves can be rather sudden. Almost every charge a black bear makes is false and meant to warn you. Black bear attacks are very infrequent. I've not been around bison enough to have good, on-the-ground, field smarts with them to say how often they false charge vs. attack charge.

  • Bizon?

  • This bison probably does not like her perfume........."uhh that stuff is offensive..charge!!

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