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Pissed off Bullwinkle will stomp a mud hole in your ass right quick.
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Quoted: You can fight off or kill a mountain lion with a pocket knife. Not so with a moose. A pissed off rutting bull or a protective cow are terrifying and potentially deadly. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Mountain lions all the way. Moose are only dangerous if you crowd them (or hit them with your car). A cat will kill for fun. You can fight off or kill a mountain lion with a pocket knife. Not so with a moose. A pissed off rutting bull or a protective cow are terrifying and potentially deadly. Those crazy bastards kill themselves charging friggin freight trains! |
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Whoever voted Gila Monster is a 'tard. They have to chew on you a little to get the poison in, which is easily defeated with a pair of boots. You can also pop 'em dead with a .22 pistol.
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Quoted: You can fight off or kill a mountain lion with a pocket knife. Not so with a moose. A pissed off rutting bull or a protective cow are terrifying and potentially deadly. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Mountain lions all the way. Moose are only dangerous if you crowd them (or hit them with your car). A cat will kill for fun. You can fight off or kill a mountain lion with a pocket knife. Not so with a moose. A pissed off rutting bull or a protective cow are terrifying and potentially deadly. I suppose it could be done if it were a frontal attack, but I wouldn't like my odds against a cat armed only with a knife. Heck, even with a pistol there's a chance it will mess me up before I know it's after me. I understand that moose can be dangerous, but don't you pretty much have to knowingly get close to them to trigger an attack? All of the moose I've seen (including two this month) have been pretty mellow, but none had calves or were rutting bulls. A buddy of mine did have a sketchy encounter as a kid when he was too close to a cow and her calf to take a pic. That's a lot of animal to have pissed at you. |
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I put lion, 25 years of living in AK, I know enough about moose to keep out of trouble. I almost put snakes, no sneks in AK either, I'm not familiar with them to be comfortable around them.
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The only one I've ever run into in the wild is a mountain lion. That said way more people attacked each year by moose than mountain lions so...moose.
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I told this story in another thread recently but here it is again, since we're on the subject:
I was out jogging on a trail through the woods one day while I was stationed in Alaska, and I came around a bend and there was a giant moose standing right by the side of the trail. I was already right on top of him by the time I saw him, and, there not really being a great deal of time for deliberations, I just said "Fuck it" and kept on running right past him. Well, next thing I know, I hear this snorting and the thumping of hooves right next to me. He was running right alongside me. We ran this way for about 50 yards or so, before he broke off into the woods. I just thought the shit was funny, and I was laughing. Now, maybe I am not supposed to be alive right now, but apparently the moose just wasn't up to stomping me to death like the OP's poll suggests he was supposed to. ETA: The North American four legged animal that scares me most is the mountain lion. |
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Quoted: Mountain lion, in the dark woods, that wants to eat you View Quote It is VERY rare for an puma to take on an adult human as a food source. They might consider children to be fair game, but unless you are laying down or crouched, puma's see you as something too big to tackle without risk. If you study puma attacks, they tend to be related to adult persons not just walking along upright. (The classic one was the bicyclist who was crouched over dealing with a flat tire, and the cat decided it was an easy mark.) The moose is the one that, while he certainly isn't engaging you as a food source, is the one most likely to give no shits about why you are in his territory, and wants you gone. |
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Quoted: All dangerous in their own way. Venomous snakes most likely cause the most numerous serious injuries/hospitalizations yearly. White tails are probably up there too, but they're not scary enough for your list...lol. View Quote The typical profile of a venomous snake bite victim in N. America is an adult male between 18-23 years of age, with a BAC of over 0.1 at the time of the bite. One must factor that into any calculation about the actual danger of a venomous snake. |
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Quoted: Whoever voted Gila Monster is a 'tard. They have to chew on you a little to get the poison in, which is easily defeated with a pair of boots. You can also pop 'em dead with a .22 pistol. View Quote YUP. A Gila Monster will spend as much effort as possible getting away, unless you are dumb enough to decide to pick it up. Even if you are truly stupid enough to pick it up, and it bites you, it's strategy for invenomating you is to masticate (chew) it's venomous saliva into the bite. It takes a LONG time to really get very much venom into the victim, and while they are hard to pry their jaws open, it's not like a few minutes of pissed off lizard clamped on your flesh is a death sentence. I would postulate that more people have died from Gila Monster tetanus infections from the bite than from the venom. In fact, I think that virtually every incident of someone getting bit by one of these lizards involved someone trying to handle the thing. In that case, they got what they deserved. |
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Quoted: All dangerous in their own way. Venomous snakes most likely cause the most numerous serious injuries/hospitalizations yearly. White tails are probably up there too, but they're not scary enough for your list...lol. View Quote The fact they will occasionally decide to attack people nonwithstanding, I bet whitetails are number one just due to car accidents. |
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The griz and black bear in Glacier National Park have a taste for human flesh.
Quite a few people killed and eaten by both. |
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Quoted: The grizz should have been on your survey. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/42994/grizzley_jpg-2284868.JPG View Quote That puts things into perspective. |
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You left "pit bull" or "American Staffordshire Terrier" off the poll...
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Deer. Deer fuck up more shit than any other North American animal.
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Africanized bees if you can't run, damned near took out AJ Foyt.
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Pretty sure I've had more close calls that could've messed up my life that involved single moms looking for their next meal ticket than anything on that list.
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I enjoy asking people from away if they have ever seen a moose. When they respond “no”, I say “you will, as it comes through your windshield”.
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Quoted: Moose and it's not even close. View Quote Moose and Grizz are the only two animals I get nervous around. I spend more time in the mountains than almost everyone in this thread, and I've seen exactly two mountain lions other than ones I have hunted over dogs. Yeah, I've had cats following me. I know this because of I have seen their tracks in mine when I have circled around, but they don't worry me. Brown bears and moose worry me. |
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Liberal politicians.
When they're loose nobody is safe, their favorite prey are the weak: the very young, females, and the elderly. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Mountain lions all the way. Moose are only dangerous if you crowd them (or hit them with your car). A cat will kill for fun. Statistically wrong. Do the moose attack stats make it possible to pull out people who crowd them or otherwise antagonize them? I can't say I've heard of anyone minding their own business attacked by a moose. Every moose attack I've heard of has been people trying to get close to them. Maybe it happens, but the moose I've seen have all been pretty mellow when provided space. I could see how maybe during the rut a bull might be a bit obnoxious. If someone is attacked while alone by a cougar in a remote area does it ever get reported? Or do they just get listed as missing? |
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Farm animals,
bees, wasps, hornets, dogs, continue to represent the most danger to humans. |
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