10 Replies to “Lucky little girl.”

  1. Remember ! To a PETA member … a Cougar = a fish = a cricket = a little girl. Of course they will be mourning the death of any creature … except human Kelsi

  2. Well, Kelsi is a girl, so PETA can’t complain about that. But she’s a person of pallor, so that’s a strike against her. And her family is apparently relgious, so that’s at least two more strikes against her. It remains to be discovered whether they are vegan or had cannibalistic animal-based foodstuffs at their camp, so that’s a moot point. But they were clearly violating the cat’s rights by being in its territory, so I’d say it’s an open and shut case. PETA will be calling for little Kelsi to be summarily tried and convicted for the family’s crimes against Gaia.

  3. If you hear something in the bush that sounds like a baby pierced with a pitchfork, it’s a cougar in heat. I had one hanging around maybe 10 years ago. Extremely creepy. I’ve never seen one but someone with hounds killed two next door.

  4. The naive attitude of left-wits (halfwits at least have a bit of smarts) toward these big cats is simply boggling. We had a case a couple of years back where a full-grown cougar had wandered into town, and was lounging in a roadside ditch, curiously watching everyone who passed. People would stop in their cars to ogle and virtually nobody raised the question of what might go wrong with a cougar being “comfortable” around people.
    Eventually, somebody with some sense and a cougar-tag hunted it down and ended the problem.

  5. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bear-attack-port-coquitlam-1.3720253
    Note- this 2nd version of the CBC story removed the predatory attack detail. The girl was being dragged away, something bears do with food. A simple scare away attack is a charge, a growl, even a bite, all as a warning to stay away. This was different.
    The original version:
    “Officers killed its mother on Saturday after the animal bit and dragged the victim near a popular hiking trail at Shaughnessy Street and Lincoln Avenue where the trail along the Coquitlam River leads to a wilderness area.
    • Bear attack in Coquitlam leaves 10-year-old girl with critical injuries
    • Coquitlam ‘bears’ down on residents who leave out wildlife attractants
    Meanwhile witnesses described a desperate fight to try and save the victim.
    Daniel Joplin says bystanders who witnessed the bear attack rushed to try and free the
    victim by hitting the animal. (Bill Cook)
    “I heard shouting and yelling and I ran out with some other people and saw the bear dragging
    her across the trail there into the woods and then people rushed it and attacked it,” said Daniel
    Joplin.
    “It pulled her into the bush and was trying to pull her further and people were whacking its head
    and eventually it let go but tried to bite again.”
    The girl was eventually rescued and taken to hospital with critical injuries. Her condition on Sunday
    was described as serious.
    Conservation office inspector Murray Smith says the attack that happened on Saturday, August 13,
    2016 in Coquitlam is extremely rare. (CBC)
    “It was a very unfortunate situation where two people encountered a mother bear with her cub and
    you know there was an attack and so just extremely bad luck,” said Murray Smith, a Conservation office inspector.
    ——————————————————–
    Bad luck? No, not luck, by gov’t. policy.
    Culling bear populations by hunting and/or trapping wad done to protect human safety, formerly the priority of governments. Now it’s isn’t.

  6. elizabethm…a bite to eat. I’d be PO’d also with that stupid yellow ear piercing forced on me by some drugging go-gooder of a “game warden and/or conservationist”.

  7. I am not a bleeding heart. But I do think killing the cat was overkill. They don’t even know that it was the same cat.

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