Sleeping teen is bitten by wolf near Lake Winnibigoshish

This must have been in the same part of Minnesota that I posted about two days ago, where people have been regularly feeding wolves. Too bad, because people were starting to appreciate seeing wolves there. But wolves best be deathly afraid of humans at all times, if they know what’s good for them. The DNR doesn’t have to send in UN inspectors before going on the offensive against wolves.

There’s no mention in this article about why the wolf bit someone, but my guess is he was attracted by the smell of whatever food the humans had cooked that night or had in the tent with them. Who knows, maybe the kid had a peperoni stick by his head and the wolf was startled when he stirred his sleep. (People should know not to bring food in a tent with them.) I remember a camping trip where my brother in law had brought food in the tent and woke up to find that a mouse had chewed it, right by his head.

Anyway, the wolf (rest his soul) obviously wasn’t really trying to hurt or kill anyone, or he wouldn’t have been deterred when a 16 year old boy kicked at him.

http://www.startribune.com/local/221254011.html                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY    Star Tribune August 26, 2013

A solitary wolf bit a 16-year-old-old boy sleeping outside his tent near Lake Winnibigoshish on Sunday, the first documented wolf attack in Minnesota history.

The unidentified boy, who is reportedly from Solway, Minn., stood up and kicked at the wolf, which then ran away, according to state wildlife officials.

The teenager, who was staying at a campground in the Chippewa National Forest, was driven to a hospital near Bemidji, where he was treated for a gash on the back of his head and canine punctures on either side of his face.

A 75-pound adult male wolf that matched the description provided by the boy and others at the campground was trapped and killed Monday morning by federal wildlife officials.

The wolf’s body was taken to the University of Minnesota veterinary school, where it is being tested for rabies and dissected. Investigators will collect DNA in an effort to match it to saliva samples on the victim.

“This is a rare occurrence,” said Tom Provost, enforcement manager for the Department of Natural Resources. He said there have been no other recorded cases in Minnesota of a wild wolf attacking a human, though it has occurred elsewhere in the United States and Canada, and more frequently in India.

The wolf that was killed Monday had a deformed jaw. The top and bottom were out of alignment, and it was missing a canine tooth, Provost said, meaning the animal likely had learned to survive by hanging around campgrounds.

In order to hunt successfully, wolves must be able to exert tremendous force on their prey, Provost said. An adult wolf is capable of biting with a force of 1,000 to 1,500 pounds of pressure per square inch, a strength that makes it possible to chomp through a moose femur in six to eight bites. A German shepherd has a biting pressure of 750 pounds per square inch.

“It was trapped in an area where it was likely habituated to humans and had the ability to grab easy food,” he said. “That’s not normal behavior.”

In fact, other campers reported that the wolf was behaving in an entirely unwolf-like way. Normally, wolves stay away from humans and are rarely alone. Pat Tetrault, 28, was one of several people who saw the wolf in the campground Friday and early Saturday. His wife saw it by their truck. In the early morning, while the family of four and their dog were fast asleep, it bit through the wall of their tent.

“It was by where my son was sleeping,” Tetrault said. “He said he felt it go under the tent, and then lift it up. He thought it was pretty cool. Took him awhile to go back to sleep.”

About ten minutes later Tetrault said he heard shouting from the direction of where the teenager was bitten.

Provost said that the teenager was lying outside his tent when “unbeknownst to him a large canine approached him from the rear.” He woke up when the wolf bit his head, and it was a “struggle to free himself from its jaws,” Provost said. The boy confronted the wolf, but it fled only when he launched a kick at it.

Friends and members of his family provided rudimentary first aid, and then drove him to the hospital.

Wildlife officials evacuated the campground and set up a perimeter. One officer saw it on the road and took a shot at it, but missed. On Monday morning federal wildlife officials found the wolf caught in a leg-hold trap that had been set around the campground over the weekend, and shot it.

copyrighted wolf in river

 

9 thoughts on “Sleeping teen is bitten by wolf near Lake Winnibigoshish

  1. We need very heavy fines, like $500 to $1000 for feeding wildlife and have the warning well posted. We also need zoning laws around our national parks and some national forests that forbids chicken and probably even sheep from being within 25 miles or more. We have been killing wolves and bears, worth thousands more for chicken and sheep depredation. If we do not do some of this it amounts to continuing encroachment on wildlife. Ranchers who ranch on leases in national forests should have to take any losses without complaint and be fined heavily for not having nonlethal control of predators regarding their stock in place, else we have continuing encroachment.

  2. People do not realize, and I think in their heart maybe, Maybe they think a favor is done by giving a wild animal food puts a death sentence on their heads. I think; if there were away for people to connect mind and heart thought, action, reaction then maybe we would all be better off? When I worked at a rescue and rehab in Telluride, a baby bear had been brought in whose mom was shot by someone who left dog food out in the garage. We had to be mean to him until FWS came back to get him in a den for hibernation. If was difficult for me, but I knew it was for his own good. And everyday I would tell him, vocally and mental photos ‘my kind kills your kind.’ I hope it worked.

    This does sadden me a great deal. Almost a set-up to further the agenda.

  3. Has anybody considered that this might have been a captive-raised wolf that was deformed from either inbreeding or beatings or both? His reaction to humans was extreme panic. A wolf pup will lick your face in an attempt to get you to give up food. That behavior goes on as submissive behavior by a non-alpha to try to get permission to eat. I think something in this process backfired?

    Too many people with ego issues, go buy a wolf or high content wolfdog for all the wrong reasons. I recently spoke with a woman who rescued an abused, neglected wolfdog from a puppy-mill in Florida breeding wolf/pit bull/rottie cross dogs to sell for protection! And probably fighting? (Freakin’ stupid assholes!) Wolves do what they want, when they want and housetraining a wolf is nearly impossible, which earns them severe beatings from these idiots!

    I have never been bitten by an adult wolf in 20+ years of rescue. Pups play nip. Terriers have given me serious bites without warning for no reason at all!

    If the wildlife people and park officials knew they had a tent raiding wolf in a State Park, why did they allow the wolf to stay there? Maybe they are stupid or worse yet, maybe they wanted to kill him and all the other wolves they could in the area? Tragic. Another dead handicapped wolf that should have gone to a rescue where he could be fed soft food, neutered and had a long and far better life and had a female wolf friend.

    Jim is correct. Don’t feed animals in a camping area and don’t leave food in the tent or near it! Lock it in your trunk or hoist it up in a tree with a rope and inside two trashbags tied so the smell of food can’t escape.

    If you want to get rid of old moose or deer meat, call a local wolf or wolfdog shelter. Everyone I know is really struggling financially, most depend on these kind of donations, as well as roadkilled wolf prey. Help stop the needless wolf executions!

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