“It was a freak act of God”

Sheep hunter dies in Alaska Range south of Fairbanks
Posted: Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Tim Mowry/tmowry@newsminer.com

FAIRBANKS—A sheep hunter from Texas was killed in the Alaska Range south of Fairbanks on Friday after a large rock fell on him as he was walking along a creek bottom.

Manuel Rechy, 48, of Laredo, Texas, was on a guided hunt in the area of Red Mountain and Dry Creek, 49 miles east of the Parks Highway near Healy, when the accident occurred, according to Alaska State Troopers.

The guide who owns the guiding company Rechy was hunting with, Eric Umphenour, of Fairbanks, called the accident “a freak deal.”

“A rock came down the hill and crushed him,” Umphenour said. “It wasn’t a rock slide; it was just one big boulder.

“It was a freak act of God,” he said. “It’s like being struck by lightning.”

Rechy and an assistant hunting guide were walking down a creek bottom at around 6:30 p.m., scouting for Dall sheep, when the large rock broke loose from about 30 feet above them on a hill, Umphenour said.

“(The assistant guide) saw it coming and told him to get out of the way, but the guy wasn’t fast enough,” he said. “It’s not like we were walking up cliffs. They were in a creek bottom. It was in the valley floor.”

The rock, which Umphenour estimated weighed 1,000 pounds, slammed into Rechy, knocking him in the creek and causing serious injuries to his legs. The assistant guide pulled the hunter out of the creek and covered him with his coat before going to alert Umphenour. When the two guides returned less than an hour later, Rechy was unresponsive, Umphenour said.

Umphenour used a satellite phone to call Alaska State Troopers, who were notified at 7:41 p.m. Troopers attempted to fly a helicopter to the scene but turned back due to bad weather, trooper spokeswoman Megan Peters said.

Troopers alerted the Rescue Coordination Center in Anchorage, which in turn notified the Alaska Air National Guard. Rescuers arrived at the scene of the accident at around 2 a.m., about six hours after troopers were notified, Umphenour said. Rechy was flown to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

Umphenour, who has been guiding in the area for 20 years, said he doesn’t know what caused the rock to move. It had been raining all day Friday prior to the accident, he said.

“It’s a creek I’ve been up 20 or 30 times over the course of 20 years,” Umphenour said. “We snowmobile up it in the winter.”

While he didn’t know Rechy well, the Texan was a repeat customer, Umphenour said. “A lot of his friends had hunted with us. He was no stranger to us.”

On Tuesday, Umphenour was still having a hard time trying to process what happened.

“I’ve never had anything like that happen,” he said. “When somebody dies in a hunting accident they usually get shot.”

Sheep photo copyright Jim Robertson

Sheep photo copyright Jim Robertson

Never Trust a Hunter Named “Killer”

It’s nice to hear that the hunter who died in a shooting accident in Tomales, CA had so many friends. However, one of them, going by the name “Killer,” may not have been such a good friend after all. He did the deceased a disservice by trying to post the following comment with details about his alleged friend’s death:

“He already killed a deer before he jumped in his Jeep and ran it over (just to make sure it was dead). The ‘accident’ occurred when he backed up over the (slightly smashed) deer and the firearm slid from the gun rack and discharged, striking the valiant hunter in the hand and throat.”

Now “killer” is back, now cleverly posting under a new handle, “Animal Lover.” This time his comment is just a retraction of his last (unwelcome) comment:

“I am amazed that you people actually believe Mr. Weller drove a vehicle over the deer. I put that non-fact in my comment because the Moderator would not post my original comment. I knew that it would not probably not help the “hunting cause”, but it did provoke the desired result” [Which was what? To make us think hunters have so little regard for the animals they shoot that they’d drive over them afterwards; or to draw out a lot of outraged comments from us for some reason?

How are we supposed to believe him this time? If I believed him that his friend drove over the deer he shot, it’s because I never had the pleasure to make that particular hunter’s acquaintance. But I’ve known plenty of other hunters who routinely pulled similar stunts. When asked if he’d seen any deer that day, one unabashedly announced, “No, but I got off a couple of good ‘sound shots’!” [Meaning, he shot blindly at a sound he heard in the bushes].

I’ve seen hunters standing up in the back of pickup beds, loaded rifles at the ready, in hopes of shooting deer from the road. Working in the woods, I’ve been in the rig while the driver tried to run a deer down. And of course, the truck cab with three cammo-clad, orange-vested hunters sitting abreast, each with a can of malt liquor on their lap, is as common a site as falling yellow leaves in Autumn.

So, do I believe “Killer’s” original story, or his new retraction? Maybe neither; maybe this is something the local Sherriff and county coroner should look into. Who knows, maybe “Killer” himself is responsible for the killing. He sure likes to blow smoke like someone with a guilty conscience.

Anyway, it doesn’t really matter to us; we’re here for the animals. We don’t have time to dwell on the hunters or their apologists (although some sure seem to crave any attention they can get).

Text and Wildlife Photography © Jim Robertson

Text and Wildlife Photography © Jim Robertson

Have a Nice Day—Leave the Weapons At Home

Hunters and their apologists have been getting craftier lately in regards to public perception. They seem to understand that if they were to reveal hunting’s dark underbelly and its evil agenda to usurp all open land for their blood-sport, people would not only be appalled, but the roughly 95% of Americans who do not hunt would not go along with their program.

And their PR efforts seem to be paying off. That’s why you hear some non-hunters say things like, “The hunters I know rarely talk about ‘the kill,’ they talk about sitting on the hill in the still of the morning with the fog burning off, with their father/son/grandfather/uncles. They tell you stories of years past about the times spent with their friends and family.”

Ok, great, spend a nice morning watching the fog lift. Get out for a walk in the woods with your friends or family members. But leave the guns behind—that way nobody will get hurt. Too many people lately have had their day ruined when one of their party ends up getting shot. I’m sure the family of Joseph Steele wishes they had opted for a peaceful nature walk rather than an armed foray last Saturday evening, when the 28-year-old was accidentally shot and killed by one of his own.

As the Kokomo Tribune reports it in their update, “Name released in hunting death, Deputies say Joseph Steele was accidentally shot and killed by family memberSteele was hunting with family members in a wooded area just south of his residence. According to witnesses, the hunters had split up, and at some point they lost sight of the Steele. One of the hunters fired from a distance at what he perceived to be a squirrel, deputies said. Moments later, Steele yelled out that he’d been shot. He was able to communicate with witnesses before eventually losing consciousness…

It’s not the 1800s anymore, people. When we finally realize we can enjoy nature without brandishing a weapon, these kinds of accidents will be a thing of the past.

Text and Wildlife Photography © Jim Robertson

Text and Wildlife Photography © Jim Robertson

Anchorage sheep hunter rescued after Interior raft accident

Here’s one with a happy ending for all…

Sheep photo copyright Jim Robertson

Sheep photo copyright Jim Robertson

http://www.adn.com/2013/08/15/3025570/anchorage-sheep-hunter-rescued.html#storylink=cpy

The Associated Press August 15, 2013

FAIRBANKS, Alaska — A 56-year-old Anchorage man injured in a rafting accident near Delta Junction was rescued by the Alaska Air National Guard.

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reports Mike Vogel was on a sheep hunting trip Tuesday and rafting on the Gerstle River. He came out of the raft and was dragged behind it.

Vogel suffered broken ribs and a severed finger.

His hunting partner, 62-year-old Melvin Iler of Oregon, set up a fire and shelter for Vogel and then hiked 15 miles to the Alaska Highway, where he summoned help.

An Air National Guard helicopter found Vogel at 8:45 p.m.

He was taken to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital and treated for serious injuries.

The Air Guard says pilots had to contend with wildfire smoke limiting visibility to less than a mile.

Information from: Fairbanks (Alaska) Daily News-Miner, http://www.newsminer.com

Hunter Killed by Buffalo he was Trying to Shoot

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A British man working as a professional hunter on a private game reserve in Zimbabwe has been killed by a wounded buffalo he was trying to shoot.

By Peta Thornycroft, Aislinn Laing in Johannesburg
2:45PM BST 11 Jun 2012                                                           [My comments interjected in brackets throughout]
Owain Lewis, 67, had been tracking the animal for three days to finish it off after it was shot and injured by a visiting American hunter he was escorting.

[okay, first off, how many years must he have been killing animals if he was 67 when one finally finished off his career?]

Paul Smith, the owner of Chifuti Safaris in the lower Zambezi Valley, said Mr Lewis was “very tough and experienced” but had been caught unawares when the buffalo charged from the undergrowth and tossed him in the air.

[What, no video?]

“It turned on him and attacked him and unfortunately the apprentice hunter with him could not shoot the animal as Owen’s body was in the way,” he said.

[Fortunately, that is.)

“It was a very tough fight. Owain’s neck was broken but the apprentice did manage to kill the buffalo.

[Oh, that last bit is a real shame.]

“We are very shocked. This is the first time we have had an incident like this.

[and hopefully not the last.]

Rabbit hunter died in freak accident

A rabbit hunter died after being shot in the head when his shotgun trigger snagged on the zip of his boot, an inquest has heard.

Father-of-two Carl Rubisch, 30, died of a single gunshot wound after the gun fired as he got out of a Land Rover to shoot a rabbit.

He and friend Stuart Forrest, 30, were on an organised night-time shooting trip on farmland near Brockton, Shropshire, when the tragedy happened.

Mr. Forrest told the inquest he turned the lights off on his Land Rover before using a powerful torch after spotting a rabbit 80 yards away.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2376692/Rabbit-hunter-died-freak-accident-trigger-snagged-zip-boot-left-Land-Rover.html#ixzz2a2BQteEH
[They must not have seen Monty Python and the Holy Grail….]

monty-python-image-3

Man dies after hunting accident in Africa

http://news.iafrica.com/sa/871613.html
Mon, 22 Jul 2013 1:11 PM

A man who was accidentally shot in the head during a hunting trip in Limpopo has died in hospital.

Juan-Pierre Kleingeld (24) died on Monday morning after being in a coma for more than a week, Die Beeld reported.

Kleingeld was shot in the head while hunting with some friend on the farm, Alldays, in Limpopo. Kleingeld had been driving a bakkie during the hunt when he was shot.

According to Die Beeld, one of his friends – who was standing at the back of the bakkie – accidentally discharged his hunting rifle. Kleingeld was struck in the head.

90823_Pred_ATACS

Montana’s Opening Day of Hunting Claimed Two Teens

Hunting, what a senseless waste of life…

2 Montana teenagers die in hunting accidents          October 25, 2010 6:30 am  •  Associated Press

GREAT FALLS – Two Montana teenagers died in apparent hunting accidents over the weekend, including a 17-year-old boy who was shot and killed by his 14-year-old sister as she was unloading a rifle, authorities said Monday.

The separate shootings happened Saturday, the opening day of hunting season in Montana.

The siblings from Power were on a hunting and camping trip with their father, friends and other family members in the Missouri River Breaks about 70 miles south of Chinook. They had finished hunting for the evening Saturday and the girl was unloading her rifle when it discharged, said Blaine County Undersheriff Pat Pyette.

The 17-year-old boy, who was standing less than five feet away, was shot in the face, Pyette said. He died at the scene.

Police declined to release the names of any people involved.

Also on Saturday, a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed in a separate apparent hunting accident on the Montana Hi-Line near his hometown of Malta.

Logan Wilson separated from his two companions to walk across a field, Phillips County Undersheriff Scott Moran said. After a short while, they went looking for him and called authorities after discovering that he had been shot.

KFBB-TV reported that the preliminary cause of death was listed as an accidental shooting and an investigation is under way.

No other information was immediately available.

leavetheanimalsalone

Note to Hunters: Moose Have Antlers, Humans Don’t

At least one Canadian moose hunter needs to be reminded: Moose are huge, heavy animals, sometimes sporting huge heavy antlers; Little old ladies, on the other hand…not so much.

An article on CBC News tells us:

Man Convicted of 2011 Hunting Accident

A Notre Dame Bay man has been convicted for shooting a woman he mistook for a moose.

Corey Blake, 36, of Embree was in provincial court in Gander on Thursday morning for a sentencing hearing.

In November 2011, 68-year-old Joan Primer was out for a boil-up with her family near Lewisporte when someone shot her in the shoulder. The bullet tore through Primer’s right shoulder and exited through her back.

In an agreed statement of facts, Blake said he saw what he thought was a moose, steadied his rifle on the box of his pickup and fired. Then he heard Primer scream.

Blake had initially told police his rifle went off accidentally.

In March, he pleaded guilty to criminal negligence causing bodily harm, hunting without a licence and breaching probation.

In her victim impact statement on Thursday, the court learned that after several surgeries, Primer still does not have complete use of her arm.

Blake, choking back tears, said he’d just like to say that he’s sorry and wanted to apologize in person to Primer and her family.

The Crown is asking that Blake serve nine months in jail and spend two years on probation. Blake’s lawyer is recommending probation, but said if the court must sentence him to jail time, it should only be a month or two.

He will be sentenced in August.

Wildlife Photography Copyright Jim Robertson

Wildlife Photography Copyright Jim Robertson