8 bulls escape North Attleboro rodeo and charge through mall parking lot; 1 still on the loose

The bulls got loose from a rodeo at the Emerald Square Mall around 1:30 p.m. Sunday

By Staff and wire reports  Published September 22, 2024  Updated on September 22, 2024 at 11:57 pm

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Eight bulls escaped from the rodeo at the Emerald Square Mall. All but one have been corralled.

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This is no bull: First responders in a Massachusetts city had to exercise some impromptu roundup skills when eight bulls escaped from a rodeo being held in the parking lot of a mall in North Attleboro on Sunday.

Video posted online captured the moment when the bulls escaped from the rodeo at the Emerald Square Mall. The animals charged through the crowded parking lot, knocked down fencing, bumped against a tent and rumbled toward busy U.S. Highway 1. They eventually headed for some nearby woods for short-lived freedom.

The North Attleboro Fire Department issued a warning: These rodeo bulls weren’t playing around.

“Community members should exercise extreme caution and not approach any bulls,” the agency said.

North Attleboro’s fire chief says firefighters were working a detail a detail at the rodeo at 999 S. Washington Street when they witnessed the eight bulls escape from their pen and flee into the woods behind BJ’s Restaurant and Brewhouse around 1:30 p.m.

No one was hurt during the breakout.

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One bull was caught shortly after escaping, the fire department said. North Attleboro Fire and Police, along with Massachusetts Environmental Police, searched for the remaining seven. New England Rodeo members in Norton and members from the rodeo at the mall also assisted with search efforts.

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Many were shocked by what they saw Sunday, and took out their cell phones as the bulls took off down Route 1. But perhaps no one was more shocked than Attleboro resident Chris Mooney who saw the bulls walk down his street and through his yard.

“As soon as I stepped out and I looked out there I said those aren’t horses, those are literally bulls and oh my god,” he said. “Two of them were laying down and another was budging the fence trying to get out, and the other ones were just sitting there.”

Mooney and his two boys stayed inside and watched from a safe distance.

According to the fire department, six bulls were found stuck behind a fence at a home on Prescott Street in Attleboro around 4:30 p.m. The search team members were able to safely corral all six into a trailer without further incident.

Neighbors watched as rodeo employees worked to get the bulls into a trailer.

“At first I just felt bad for the bulls. I’m like – they escaped for a reason,” said Gee Sounthonevat.

Overall, people were happy to see the animals unharmed and taken away.

“They had a fence and they corralled them into the trailer and that was it,” Sounthonevat said.

While seven of the eight were corralled by late Sunday afternoon, one of them is still on the lam, firefighters said. First responders were still combing the streets for that remaining rogue bull.

Anyone who sees the bull that is still on the loose is reminded to not approach it. Instead call 911.

The Festival Rodeo at the Emerald Square Mall — a one-day event — was shut down, officials said. How the bulls escaped was under investigation.

Polar bears rarely show up in Iceland, where they’re protected. When one arrived this week, police shot it

Polar bear
This photo shows a polar bear that was shot by the police after being considered a threat to people nearby, authorities said, in Westfjords, Iceland, Thursday Sept. 19, 2024. (Ingvar Jakobsson via AP)AP

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A polar bear was spotted outside a cottage in a remote village in Iceland, a rare sight in the island nation. It was shot by police after being considered a threat, authorities said Friday.

The bear was killed Thursday afternoon in the northwest of Iceland after police consulted the Environment Agency, which declined to have the animal relocated, Westfjords Police Chief Helgi Jensson told The Associated Press.

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“It’s not something we like to do,” Jensson said. “In this case, as you can see in the picture, the bear was very close to a summer house. There was an old woman in there.”

The owner, who was alone, was frightened and locked herself upstairs as the bear rummaged through her garbage, Jensson said. She contacted her daughter in Reykjavik, the nation’s capital, by satellite link, and called for help.

“She stayed there,” Jensson said, adding that other summer residents in the area had gone home. “She knew the danger.”

Polar bears are not native to Iceland but occasionally come ashore after traveling on ice floes from Greenland, according to Anna Sveinsdóttir, director of scientific collections at the Icelandic Institute of Natural History. Many icebergs have been spotted off the north coast in the last few weeks.

The bear shot on Thursday was the first one seen in the country since 2016. Sightings are relatively rare with only 600 recorded in Iceland since the ninth century.

While the bears are a protected species in Iceland and it’s forbidden to kill one at sea, they can be killed if they pose a threat to humans or livestock.

After two bears arrived in 2008, a debate over killing the threatened species led the environment minister to appoint a task force to study the issue, the institute said. The task force concluded that killing vagrant bears was the most appropriate response.

The group said the nonnative species posed a threat to people and animals, and the cost of returning them to Greenland, about 180 miles away, was exorbitant. It also found there was a healthy bear population in east Greenland where any bear was likely to have come from.

The young bear, which weighed between 300 to 400 pounds, will be taken to the institute to study. Scientists took samples from the bear Friday.

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They will be checking for parasites and infections and evaluating its physical condition, such as the health of its organs and percentage of body fat, Sveinsdóttir said. The pelt and skull may be preserved for the institute’s collection.

A Coast Guard helicopter surveyed the area where the bear was found to look for others but didn’t find any.

Homeowner upset after trespassing neighbor leaves traps for local wildlife: ‘All they’ve done is slowly destroy any trace of nature’

“They have to be stopped.”

by Susan Elizabeth TurekSeptember 11, 2024

"They have to be stopped."

Photo Credit: iStock

A recent tale of neighborly woes is highlighting how environmentally harmful actions by one party can impact another — and will likely have homeowners with considerate neighbors pausing for a moment of gratitude for their good fortune.  

In the r/neighborsfromh*** community, a Redditor living in rural England described how their new neighbor has been giving them constant trouble after moving in two years ago. This is after the original poster’s household had lived in harmony with the community for nearly 28 years. 

The OP explained that they initially tried to have a gentle conversation with the person next door after they tore down a shared fence, destroying plants that gave them joy and supported wildlife, including a number of bird species. 

In one distressing instance, the OP said their family returned from a relaxing holiday weekend to discover a blackbird “writhing about on the ground” and “covered in so much sticky stuff that its wings [were] stuck to its sides.” 

“We were rather upset that somebody in this fairly tight-knit village would put down glue traps, which are illegal unless used by a registered pest control company,” the OP wrote, noting that other animals also began to show up with chunks of fur and feathers missing. 

“Since they moved in all they’ve done is slowly destroy any trace of nature, cut their trees down, cut back our trees, put down AstroTurf, replaced hedges with fences, put down glue, fitted bird spikes, etc., etc.,” they added. “They moved to the middle of the bloody countryside. What were they expecting?”Join our newsletter

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Unfortunately, difficult interactions with neighbors aren’t uncommon and can hinder plans to support the local ecosystems or make planet-friendly home or yard upgrades. However, when approached with respect and kindness, chatting about environmental issues can lead to deeper understanding and connection. 

In one heartwarming case, another Redditor shared how their thoughtful neighbor allowed a passion flower vine to dangle over a fence separating their two yards. That way, the user, who adores passion flowers, can enjoy the blooms. 

Sadly for the OP, that path appears to be off the table for now. Other Redditors were outraged on their behalf, as well as that of the wildlife being harmed by their neighbor’s actions. 

“I have no words. I hope you can report them for the glue,” one person suggested. “Very cruel.”

“They have to be stopped,” another agreed. “Please contact a wildlife protection association.”