signalmankenneth
Verified User
This woman needs to be fined and barred from the park too?!! She was also very lucky this time too?!!
A woman was nearly gored by a bison after she tried to touch it in Yellowstone National Park.
A video posted to Instagram by TouronsOfYellowstone, credited to Russ Bjorn, shows a group of people on a walkway within the park, right next to the massive animal.
A woman can be seen extending her hand, trying to pet the bison. However, it then lunges forward, as if it is about to charge.
The woman runs away, falling over as she does so. She and the rest of the group can be heard squealing in fright.
The bison fortunately does not move any further and leaves the woman and the rest of the party alone. Newsweek has contacted the park for comment.
In Yellowstone, the bison population ranges from 2,300 to 5,500 animals. They can become very aggressive if they are approached and feel threatened. The bovines are actually responsible for more injuries in Yellowstone National Park than any other animal.
For this reason, the National Park Service enforces a rule wherein all visitors must stay at least 25 yards from bison at all times.
Bison can weigh up to 2,000 pounds and are capable of throwing grown men into the air "like rag dolls," according to the NPS.
On average, bison injure one or two people in Yellowstone every year, according to a 2018 study.
https://www.newsweek.com/woman-almost-gored-trying-touch-bison-yellowstone-1803256
A woman was nearly gored by a bison after she tried to touch it in Yellowstone National Park.
A video posted to Instagram by TouronsOfYellowstone, credited to Russ Bjorn, shows a group of people on a walkway within the park, right next to the massive animal.
A woman can be seen extending her hand, trying to pet the bison. However, it then lunges forward, as if it is about to charge.
The woman runs away, falling over as she does so. She and the rest of the group can be heard squealing in fright.
The bison fortunately does not move any further and leaves the woman and the rest of the party alone. Newsweek has contacted the park for comment.
In Yellowstone, the bison population ranges from 2,300 to 5,500 animals. They can become very aggressive if they are approached and feel threatened. The bovines are actually responsible for more injuries in Yellowstone National Park than any other animal.
For this reason, the National Park Service enforces a rule wherein all visitors must stay at least 25 yards from bison at all times.
Bison can weigh up to 2,000 pounds and are capable of throwing grown men into the air "like rag dolls," according to the NPS.
On average, bison injure one or two people in Yellowstone every year, according to a 2018 study.
https://www.newsweek.com/woman-almost-gored-trying-touch-bison-yellowstone-1803256
