Anonymous wrote:Park says stay 25 feet back. You see it coming you move back.
The incident began on Monday when a bison walked near a boardwalk at Black Sand Basin, about two miles northwest of Old Faithful, and the woman, described as 25 and from Ohio, approached it. She came within 10 feet of the animal, and two other people were within 25 yards of it, park officials said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.
+1. This was my thought, too. She didn't wander off.
No way. The signs all over the park are very clear that the animals have the right of way. The bison did not "come to her." She approached it.
The other crazy thing about that is that they were near Old Faithful, which means there were a lot of people. I'll bet you $100 that people were yelling to her to not approach the bison. She did it anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.
+1. This was my thought, too. She didn't wander off.
No way. The signs all over the park are very clear that the animals have the right of way. The bison did not "come to her." She approached it.
The other crazy thing about that is that they were near Old Faithful, which means there were a lot of people. I'll bet you $100 that people were yelling to her to not approach the bison. She did it anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I feel bad for her. Lots of people do stupid things and some just luck out and don’t die.
+1
I do too. She went on vacation and didn't come back. If she went with a group or solo, some one or some people will be missing her.
And the group who went tubing too close to the dam, they lost two of their group. I can't imagine the horror of that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.
+1. This was my thought, too. She didn't wander off.
No way. The signs all over the park are very clear that the animals have the right of way. The bison did not "come to her." She approached it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.
+1. This was my thought, too. She didn't wander off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.
+1. This was my thought, too. She didn't wander off.
What boardwalk? This is Yellowstone National Park. She had to get out of her car to even come close to that bison and all reports clearly state she walked up to it and was then attacked.
https://apnews.com/article/animals-bison-d828194de56b7c72d632be0b95bd1dcb

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.
+1. This was my thought, too. She didn't wander off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9 people also died doing water sports over the holiday weekend (and that's just the major headline news) - respectively 3 parasailing in FL, 5 went over a waterfall in VA, 1 motorboating somewhere.
I consider all risky propositions stupid.
I heard about the 2 who were lost going over a dam in Virginia (out of a group of 12) - are you referring to them or others?
Oh you're right - the 10 others were recovered/made it to shore after going over this.
OMG why do they even allow these things!
Here's a news article - the river was extremely high from the rain and there were several water rescues on that river:
https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/people-confirmed-missing-after-group-goes-over-richmond-bosher-dam/
Anonymous wrote:I dunno, I feel bad for her. Lots of people do stupid things and some just luck out and don’t die.
Anonymous wrote:The thing that makes me have a teeny bit of sympathy for her is that she stayed on the boardwalk. It was the bison who came to her, essentially. She still should've known better, but I can imagine getting lulled into thinking you're safe if you stay on the designated path.