Watch: Wild horses flee with grizzly bear in hot pursuit
Scroll to end for a 2nd video.

A person can outrun a gator, though. Fort Myers, Florida:
Watch: Frightened angler chased from pond by 'hungry' alligator

Opps. AttackHenAttack.Watch a Hen Turkey Tackle a Drone
The hen was guarding her poults when the intruder got a little too close for comfort
... As soon as the intruder buzzes too close, the hen flies up and attacks the drone, taking it down in a split second. The drone is then left sitting in the grass while the hen kicks it again for good measure.
... A self-proclaimed hunting nerd, Senarighi tells Outdoor Life that she recorded the video on June 24 while she and her husband were at their hunting property near Remer. She’d bought the drone earlier that morning for an upcoming trip they had planned, and she decided to send it up for a test flight around the property.
“I had never flown a drone before in my life, and I bet I didn’t have 45 minutes of flight time on it before the turkey took it down,” she says....
The hen and poults survived the ordeal—Senarighi says she spotted the same family of turkeys feeding in the field the next day....
“For me, the biggest lesson was that the drone has a zoom feature. I could have just zoomed in on [the hen] without actually intruding on her space,” she says. “And from now on, I will be doing that.”
St John the Baptist Parish Sheriff's Office
2d ·
Suspicious Subject Apprehended
Last night, SWAT responded to Walnut Street in LaPlace in reference to a suspicious subject wandering in the neighborhood. Upon arrival, officers attempted to make contact with the suspect who resisted arrest. Eventually, officers were able to apprehend the suspect
The article and TikTok don't tell us anything about the owner other than the snarky guilt-tripping. 20 years is a long time to keep a dog apparently healthy and happy, and I choose to not assume that people are heartless and cruel. Many things may have happened - death or disability of owner, financial calamity, unavoidable change in living situation (assisted living?), etc.
The good news is that Dax did get a new real home.Vrede too wrote: ↑Tue Jul 11, 2023 9:06 amThe article and TikTok don't tell us anything about the owner other than the snarky guilt-tripping. 20 years is a long time to keep a dog apparently healthy and happy, and I choose to not assume that people are heartless and cruel. Many things may have happened - death or disability of owner, financial calamity, unavoidable change in living situation (assisted living?), etc.
For all we know the owner/heir/friend may have driven hundreds of miles to Loxahatchee Groves, FL in order to give Dax his best remaining years.
Ugh, but good on BDRR.O Really wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 12:00 pmThe good news is that Dax did get a new real home.
But no, the only people who drove "hundreds of miles" were the Big Dog people who went to get him.
From another article: "Big Dog Ranch Rescue first heard about his situation after they were contacted by Walton County Sheriff's Animal Services in DeFuniak Springs in Florida. ... Big Dog Ranch Rescue CEO and founder Lauree Simmons sent a transport team to bring Dax to them."
With no details reported we can only guess.So if the original owner had died or something, wouldn't it have been just as easy to report?
Right. And I'm guessing there's nothing to redeem/excuse the original owner.Vrede too wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 12:10 pmUgh, but good on BDRR.O Really wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 12:00 pmThe good news is that Dax did get a new real home.
But no, the only people who drove "hundreds of miles" were the Big Dog people who went to get him.
From another article: "Big Dog Ranch Rescue first heard about his situation after they were contacted by Walton County Sheriff's Animal Services in DeFuniak Springs in Florida. ... Big Dog Ranch Rescue CEO and founder Lauree Simmons sent a transport team to bring Dax to them."With no details reported we can only guess.So if the original owner had died or something, wouldn't it have been just as easy to report?
IMO if the writer knew of some vile, inexcusable reason the owner is disposing of Dax after 20 years of decent care s/he would have included that part of the story.O Really wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 1:03 pmRight. And I'm guessing there's nothing to redeem/excuse the original owner.
Let's tweak the story a little: Walton County Sheriff calls Big Dog. "We had a guy die/got killed, he doesn't seem to have any close relatives or friends and we've got his dog that needs some special care." If you're the writer, no way are you not going to include that sad click-bait part of the story.
Well there's that. But I don't know that there would have to be anything vile - except in the mind of hard-core animal people such as myself. Lots of people do things "normally" that I, and probably billy.p, find unacceptable. They take them to fireworks shows; they take them places where dogs are having to walk on hot asphalt; they take little short-legged dogs on hikes over hilly and rough terrain; they go out with no water for their dog; they drive around in a pickup with their dog loose or tied in the back...yada. So the original owner doesn't have to be intentionally cruel, but unless he's dead, he owes his dog more than a drop off somewhere that the sheriff can rescue him.
Agreed!!! My hesitance to condemn only extended to the unavoidable. Life, and death, happens.O Really wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 2:48 pmWell there's that. But I don't know that there would have to be anything vile - except in the mind of hard-core animal people such as myself. Lots of people do things "normally" that I, and probably billy.p, find unacceptable. They take them to fireworks shows; they take them places where dogs are having to walk on hot asphalt; they take little short-legged dogs on hikes over hilly and rough terrain; they go out with no water for their dog; they drive around in a pickup with their dog loose or tied in the back...yada. So the original owner doesn't have to be intentionally cruel, but unless he's dead, he owes his dog more than a drop off somewhere that the sheriff can rescue him.
... The rescue group hopes Dax's story serves as a reminder to other potential pet owners.
"Adopting older dogs can be rewarding and with many having more mellow personalities these animals make perfect companions," a BDRR spokesperson told Newsweek.
Dax likely wouldn't have lived far beyond his average life expectancy if he hadn't received good care from his previous owners. BDRR told us they don't know the circumstances behind Dax's surrender and it's possible the owners had a valid reason....
One heck of a rabid, 55-pound beaver attacked a girl swimming in a Georgia lake, and her dad beat it to death
... The beaver bit the girl's leg as she was swimming on private property in Lake Lanier near Gainesville, Hall County Animal Control field supervisor Kevin Beucker told the outlet.
It was the "biggest beaver" the investigating game warden had ever seen, DNR Wildlife Resources Supervisor Don McGowan told WSB-TV....
There was no indication that the attacking beaver was trying to protect any baby beavers in the area, authorities told the outlet....
Local wildlife biologists told WSB-TV that beaver attacks are rare in the area, and that the last incident they could remember at Lake Lanier occurred 13 years ago.
North American beavers typically weigh between 35 and 65 pounds, though the heaviest beaver on record weighed 110 pounds, per the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute.
Beavers are rarely aggressive to humans unless provoked, and attacks are often attributed to rabies.
In a similar case, a 73-year-old man in Massachusetts was attacked in September 2021 by a beaver that was presumed to be rabid. The attack lasted around five minutes, and the man, who tried to punch the beaver multiple times in self-defense, sustained lacerations on his arms and legs and a fractured finger.
In 2012, a group of boy scouts stoned a rabid beaver to death after it attacked a 51-year-old man swimming in Pennsylvania. The boy scouts helped the man get out of the water, at which point the beaver switched tack and attacked a pool noodle.