• ALoafOfBread
    link
    fedilink
    English
    68
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    At various parks, including in Wyoming, I have seen tourists:

    1. approach a bison (within 15 ft or so) while holding a toddler. Multiple other people approaching bison. Bison can weigh over a ton and can be aggressive.

    2. take a selfie with and then attempt to touch a male elk on its head. It was in a herd and actually charged them but didn’t fully commit and hurt them - just scared them (but not enough imo)

    3. dozens of people taking severe risks when hiking in remote areas. In the desert, 10 miles out when it’s 90f+ wearing sandals with no water and no cover. Rushing by other hikers on a <2ft wide ledge with a 300ft sheer drop while wearing sandals and carrying their young child in a bulky carrier on their back, etc.

    4. getting within 25ft or so of a male moose to get a picture, moose was visibly agitated. Moose weigh about a half ton and can be quite aggressive.

    5. large group of people following black bear female with cubs, on foot, for pictures - like 50ft back but still too close for their safety and for the bear’s safety, especially when they’re following it.

    Frighteningly many people have zero respect for nature, treat national parks like theme parks, and put themselves, animals, and their children at risk for no good reason in situations that are 100% avoidable.

    • Jo Miran
      link
      fedilink
      English
      382 months ago

      PSA for those reading the above comment: Do not fuck with moose bulls, especially during the summer. They are very willing to fuck your shit up. Bears are a known danger, but people always underestimate moose aggression.

      • @Maggoty
        link
        English
        62 months ago

        I just don’t understand that. I can see not getting that moose are dangerous from the safety of your home. But at the point you’re seeing one in real life the size alone should be a giant red flag.

    • @Mirshe
      link
      English
      11
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      I saw several people try to go hiking like that at Red Rocks outside of Las Vegas when I was there.

      It was summer. The temperature was 113F that day.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        72 months ago

        One time I decided to take a day trip to the Valley of Fire, not far from there. It was August and 116 degrees. I had it all planned out. Figured out which stops along the way were short enough for me to walk safely in the heat. Brought lots of water and was never to far from the air conditioned car.

        I’ll be damned if I didn’t run into people wearing polo shirts and khakis. Carrying no water or anything at all to drink.

        It’s like they were writing an instruction manual on how to get heat stroke.

    • @Maggoty
      link
      English
      3
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      Lived in Arizona for a decade. Can confirm people are really fucking dumb with hiking in the heat. They close the trails around Phoenix every summer now and people go right past those signs and die anyways.

      Arizona also has the dumb motorist law where if you need to be rescued from a flash flood you drove into, you’re paying for it. In general Arizona is one of those states where signs saying “this is dangerous, turn around” should really be heeded.

      The last one is the I-17 going up to Flagstaff. They have signs for when chains are required and areas to put them on. So when you’re a hundred miles south of that point and the big electronic sign says “Chains or Turn Around”… Well you know where I’m going with that. There are sheer drops off the mountainside.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
      link
      English
      12 months ago

      So, the policy is to put an animal down if it attacks a human. Maybe we should put the human down if it provokes the attack. That would only be fair.