Pilot
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2004
- Messages
- 1,219
- Location
- Oregon
- Tractor
- JD 770, Yanmar 180D, JD 420 (not running), had a Kubota B6200
Let's introduce a little sanity here.
I am not some anti-gun nut. I have a .357, a 12 gauge, a 30-'06 and a .22LR.
This incident is so isolated that I doubt that any of you have heard of any coyote attacks on adults before. Nothing to go get your elephant gun for.
And the notion that one must always be armed in the woods is just way over-reacting for most areas. If the area has bears or cougars, maybe, if one is really nervous. But almost all the time, the critter will avoid you. If you don't have a gun, go ahead and go out to the woods anyway; enjoy yourself, the chances of getting killed in a traffic accident driving out there are a lot greater than the chances of being attacked by some wild predator.
I have 25 years working in the woods and we live on 10 acres of forest, adjacent to another 10 acres of timber, less than a mile from the Mt. Hood National forest with a mix of farm and forest all around. No predator has ever threatened me. They have always run when the saw me, including the bear that was on the other end of the log I stepped up on. We both turned around and went our separate ways.
Oh yes, there was one incident, involving a rottwieller, owned by a nutcase who threatened to kill me if I hurt his dog, but the dog was only a threatening me. I was more concerned about his owner.
I am not some anti-gun nut. I have a .357, a 12 gauge, a 30-'06 and a .22LR.
This incident is so isolated that I doubt that any of you have heard of any coyote attacks on adults before. Nothing to go get your elephant gun for.
And the notion that one must always be armed in the woods is just way over-reacting for most areas. If the area has bears or cougars, maybe, if one is really nervous. But almost all the time, the critter will avoid you. If you don't have a gun, go ahead and go out to the woods anyway; enjoy yourself, the chances of getting killed in a traffic accident driving out there are a lot greater than the chances of being attacked by some wild predator.
I have 25 years working in the woods and we live on 10 acres of forest, adjacent to another 10 acres of timber, less than a mile from the Mt. Hood National forest with a mix of farm and forest all around. No predator has ever threatened me. They have always run when the saw me, including the bear that was on the other end of the log I stepped up on. We both turned around and went our separate ways.
Oh yes, there was one incident, involving a rottwieller, owned by a nutcase who threatened to kill me if I hurt his dog, but the dog was only a threatening me. I was more concerned about his owner.