“Too Much Hunting”

Man injured in Goodhue County hunting accident

Monday, September 23, 2013 , by Brett Boese

HAY CREEK — A St. Paul man was injured Sunday in a hunting accident at the Hay Creek Recreation Area in Goodhue County.

Thao Yang, 28, was injured from “a stray shotgun blast,” according to a press release issued Monday by the Goodhue County Sheriff’s Office. The incident is believed to have happened at 1:50 p.m., though local authorities weren’t alerted to the situation until contacted by St. John’s Hospital in Maplewood at 5:19 p.m.

Yang was treated and released on Sunday, according to a hospital spokesperson.

It’s believed that Yang was hunting with another person when he was struck by pellets from a nearby hunter who was not part of their group.

“It’s one of those things of too much hunting in one place, I think,” said Kris Weiss, a sheriff’s office spokeswoman

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Fort Worth teen seriously wounded in hunting accident

Sunday, Sep. 22, 2013 By Domingo Ramirez Jr.

FORT WORTH — A Fort Worth teen who was out hunting feral hogs in Hill County was seriously wounded over the weekend when another teen placed a rifle down on the backseat of a truck and the weapon discharged, authorities said Sunday.

The 13-year-old, whom authorities did not immediately identify, was taken by helicopter ambulance to Cook Children’s Medical Center in Fort Worth where he underwent surgery. His condition early Sunday was listed as serious.

A friend of the family says the boy is an eighth-grader at Prairie Vistas Middle School in Fort Worth; the school is in the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw school district.

Investigators with the Hill County Sheriff’s Office believe it was an accidental shooting and no criminal investigation is under way, said Chief Deputy Sheriff Mark Wilson with the Hill County Sheriff’s Office.

The shooting occurred about 9 p.m. Saturday in a rural area a few miles south of Whitney. Whitney is about 70 miles south of Fort Worth.

The teen, another young boy and the father of one of the boys were out hunting hogs, Wilson said Sunday. One of the boys laid the rifle on a backseat and the weapon fired just as the victim was walking by the truck, Wilson said.

Authorities confiscated the rifle.

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2013/09/22/5184240/fort-worth-teen-seriously-wounded.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy

1 dead in squirrel hunting accident

Sep. 22, 2013 |Written by Daily Herald Media

HAMBURG — One person is dead after a hunting accident in the western Marathon County town of Hamburg, police say.

The accident happened about 10 a.m. in a wooded area along Highway F, Marathon County Sheriff’s Lt. Fred Goch said. Detectives with the Sheriff’s Department and investigators with the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources are investigating.

The name, age and gender of the victim are being withheld pending notification of relatives. More information is expected to be released later today. The hunter was shot while squirrel hunting, Sheriff’s Lt. Bill Millhausen said.

The hunting accident is the second in Marathon County in a week. On Sept. 15, a 20-year-old man was hospitalized after he was shot in the chest with a .22-caliber rifle while hunting on a trail near Happy Hollow Road in Kronenwetter, police said. The hunter was mistaken for a squirrel and was shot by another hunter, police said.

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

Near Death Experience in Hunting Accident Inspires Book on Miracles

[Where, pray tell, is God’s protection for ducks?]

Author’s Near-Death Experience in Hunting Accident Inspires Book on Miracles

By Tyler O’Neil , CP Reporter

September 17, 2013|6:28 pm

Don Jacobson, a Christian publisher who nearly died from a hunting accident in 1980, shares how his miraculous survival inspired him to encourage others to tell their miracle stories.

Don Jacobson almost died in a hunting accident, but God saved and transformed his life through a series of miracles, he says, inspiring him to publish other Christians’ tales about God’s amazing deeds.

“I ended up shooting myself in the stomach with a 12-gauge shotgun,” Jacobson, creator of the forthcoming project and book It’s A God Thing: When Miracles Happen to Everyday People, and author of God Makes Lemonade: True Stories that Sweeten & Inspire, told the Christian Post in a recent interview. He said his own miraculous survival led him to try to open other people’s eyes to the miracles God performs every day.

Jacobson’s story goes back to 1980, when as a 24-year-old, he was working in construction. One day he had his shotgun fixed, but the gunsmith accidentally drove a screw into the barrel. When the young hunter used the barrel to shove his dog away from some ducks, the weapon exploded.

Shell-shocked, Jacobson slowly realized that he’d shot himself. “I prayed a very intelligent and quick prayer – God, I’m going to need some help on this one,” he told CP.

“My gun was laying in half. I yelled, I hollered, I shot SOS shots. Nobody came, so I tried to walk, but my leg wouldn’t move.” When his leg stayed put, he realized he’d damaged it, and the “unbelievable pain” in his chest alerted him to his critical condition.

Twelve BBs entered his right side, with one on his left entering his heart and lodging itself in his lung. “If a BB had come out, I’d have bled to death,” Jacobson said. He credits God that none did.

Noticing his absence, his wife Brenda became anxious, but had no idea where he was. At 11:30 pm, his brother told her Jacobson had asked him to go hunting, and they rushed to find him in the woods.

The rescue party got lost on the way to the lake, and so they ended up in a spot the hunter had never visited before. In this foreign territory, they saw a little glint in the woods, and found his car. They finally reached him, “right on the edge of hypothermia.”

Once they’d found him, Jacobson was very thirsty, and asked for a drink. A man offered a can of grape juice, which the construction worker could have easily opened normally, but no one there was able to open it under the circumstances. “That was God’s protection,” Jacobson explained, because it he’d have swallowed that juice he would likely have drowned.

The medical helicopter sent to pick him up almost turned around due to fog, but just as it was arriving at his location, the fog cleared. It returned once the copter had picked him up.

Jacobson remembered an orderly at the hospital telling him “you’re in luck.” A missionary doctor who gained experience healing gunshot wounds worked at that hospital one in every eight weekends, and he just happened to be working that day. A Christian also, the doctor attended Jacobson’s church, but the two had never met.

After a tense surgery, the doctor told Jacobson’s wife that her husband would never walk again. God had other plans.

After 28 days in the hospital, Jacobson’s life was completely altered. “That took away my ability to work in construction, so I went back to college and into publishing,” he explained.

“Many people will say the miracles in the Bible are silly,” he said. “Maybe they are, but let me tell you about something else that’s happened.”

Jacobson’s upcoming project It’s a God Thing chronicles the stories of approximately 45 different modern miracles – from stories of survival involving 9/11 and the Boston Bombing, to a daughter getting saved in a capsized canoe, to a father catching a baseball for his son. The book is scheduled for release in December.

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Hunter gores himself on antler of elk he killed

It’s not like you have to search for these type of articles on hunting accidents–they’re in the news every day. This was sent to me by an alert reader who saw the elk as the ultimate victim of the one-sided sporting event.

Even the Associated Press saw the potential for divine justice here, opening their story with the line:

An elk slain in Utah had its last revenge when its antler punctured

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013.

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013.

the neck of the hunter who’d brought him down.

The Associated Press

VERNAL, Utah —
An elk slain in Utah had its last revenge when its antler punctured the neck of the hunter who’d brought him down.

The Salt Lake Tribune reports (http://bit.ly/15L3B5p ) the 51-year-old hunter snagged the elk Saturday east of Vernal.

Uintah County Undersheriff John Laursen says the man was trying to roll the 600- to 700-pound animal over when the antler stabbed him behind his jaw.

Deputies say the hunter called for help and told dispatchers he was having trouble breathing.

Rescuers airlifted the man to the hospital, and crews put a tube into his trachea to keep it open.

Laursen says the hunter was later flown to a different hospital for surgery, and was expected to make a full recovery.

Information from: The Salt Lake Tribune, http://www.sltrib.com

Weapons seized in hunting homicide

by K.C. Mehaffey

Sept. 4 CHESAW — Sheriff’s deputies on Tuesday seized weapons and ammunition from a Chesaw residence, across a remote road from where a grouse hunter was shot and killed on Monday.

The hunter, whose wife was notified Tuesday night, was Michael R. Carrigan, 52, of Hoquiam, said Okanogan County Sheriff Frank Rogers.

Rogers said no one has been arrested, but deputies searched a home at 470 Pontiac Ridge Road and questioned the residents, a father and son.

He said the house is about 100 yards from where Carrigan was shot.

Carrigan’s hunting partner, George R. Stover, 65, also of Hoquiam, near Aberdeen, told deputies that they were driving up Cow Camp Road at about 7 p.m. when they saw a grouse, and Carrigan got out of their truck to shoot it. After firing twice and missing, he heard another shot and turned to see Carrigan with blood on him fall to the ground. When Stover heard a second shot, he slid over to the driver’s seat and drove away, the sheriff said.

He called for help from another residence.

Rogers said when deputies arrived, Carrigan was dead.

He said deputies are investigating the scene as a homicide, and have been assisted by state Department of Fish and Wildlife officers, U.S. Border Patrol agents, and the Washington State Crime Lab.

“We seized a lot of evidence,” Rogers said. He said the homeowners are currently considered “persons of interest,” and the son was arrested on an unrelated warrant.

10-year-old Girl Shot in Idaho Hunting Accident

I remember when 10-year-old girls weren’t out hunting with shotguns. The parents should be charged with abuse….

http://magicvalley.com/news/local/mini-cassia/year-old-girl-injured-in-hunting-accident/article_18afb922-7faa-5d5d-baed-c2e01aba6133.html

BY LAURIE WELCH lwelch@magicvalley.com

BURLEY • A 10-year-old girl who was hunting with family members Sunday near Lake Walcott was shot in the face when she fell while carrying a .bolt-action 410 shotgun.

Cedar Glaesemann was taken by ambulance to Minidoka Memorial Hospital, said Cassia County Undersheriff George Warrell.

She later was transported to Primary Children’s Medical Center in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Medical center spokeswoman Bonnie Midget said she couldn’t reach the family Tuesday to get permission to release Glaesemann’s medical condition.

“We haven’t heard anything about her condition since she was taken to Primary’s,” said Warrell.

The 911 call came in shortly after 10 a.m. Sunday, said a sheriff’s news release. Deputies investigated and ruled it an accidental shooting.

The sheriff’s office “urges everyone this hunting season to be safe when handling firearms,” the statement said.

Hunting accident kills SC cop

Associated Press

GEORGETOWN, S.C — A Dorchester County sheriff’s captain has died while hunting in a forest in Georgetown County.

The coroner’s office says 44-year-old James Nettles of Summerville was reported missing late Monday morning near Andrews. His body was found around 4 p.m.

Officials say Nettles was not shot and there is no sign of foul play.

An autopsy was planned Tuesday at the Medical University of South Carolina Hospital in Charleston.

2 People (One an Eight Year Old) Injured in Dove Hunting Accident

[Bad things can happen to those who try to kill the symbol of peace.]

Two Injured in Hunting Accident,

Owen Jensen Reports Live at Ten

Nebraska Game and Parks is investigating a hunting accident at Yankee Hill Lake about 12 miles southwest of Lincoln.

According to Nebraska Game and Parks, two people were injured in an accident around 8 p.m. Sunday.

“There were some hunters hunting on a wildlife management area” said Levi Krause, Nebraska Game and Parks. “One hunter shot at a dove apparently it was over a slight ridge. We believe that the pellets from his shotgun injured two individuals from the side of the ridge.”

Krause said an eight year old boy and 26 year old man were taken to Bryan Health’s West Campus. The extent of their injuries is unknown at this time.

According to the Nebraska Game and Parks website, dove season opened Sunday, September 1st and runs through Oct. 30th.

Yankee Hill Lake is a Wildlife Management Area in Lancaster County.

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16-year-old killed in hunting rifle accident

http://www.kptv.com/story/23301778/16-year-old-killed-in-hunting-rifle-accident-in-home

16-year-old killed in hunting rifle accident in home
Posted: Aug 30, 2013
By FOX 12 Staff – email

DRAIN, OR (KPTV) –
A 16-year-old boy was killed when a friend handed him a hunting rifle inside a home and a shot was accidentally fired.

Douglas County deputies said it happened at 10:45 p.m. Thursday on Hayhurst Road in Drain.

Investigators said the victim was spending the night at his 15-year-old friend’s house. The boys were in the bedroom together when they decided to handle the rifle belonging to the younger boy.

The 15-year-old was handing the rifle to his friend when it accidentally discharged, according to investigators. The 16-year-old boy was shot and died at the scene.

The Douglas County Deputy Medical Examiner’s Office determined the shooting to be accidental. Both boys live in the Drain area and attend school there.

Deputies are not releasing their names at this time.

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