Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#5553781
06/15/16 08:20 PM
06/15/16 08:20 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,597 40 years Alaska, now Oregon
alaska viking
"Made it two years not being censored"
|
"Made it two years not being censored"
Joined: Dec 2007
Posts: 5,597
40 years Alaska, now Oregon
|
The answer is obvious. So many in Alaska bust Ted Spraker's balls about predator control, yet reap the benefits from increased moose and caribou. He gets a huge thank you from me. That said, I don't even live in that country. He has done well for my area, in general, as has the B.O.G. in general. My hat is off to them. Good luck in your area. Without killing the large predators, well, you know the results
Just doing what I want now.
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#5555339
06/17/16 02:42 PM
06/17/16 02:42 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017 Alberta
Bushman
OP
trapper
|
OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017
Alberta
|
I'm heading North this Sunday for my expedition up to Black Water Lake. I hope to have a good story or two when I return.
But I hope I don't top this one. I'm heading this way and I went to school with one of these pickers. A CBC report
What's the best way to fend off a wolf that's stalking you? Bait it with a bear cub, of course.
It sounds incredible, but that's exactly what Joanne Barnaby did when she got into a terrifying situation while out picking morel mushrooms near Fort Smith, N.W.T., last Friday.
Barnaby and her friend Tammy Caudron headed out to an area burned by wildfires to spend an hour or two searching for the elusive morels. They soon became separated, leaving Barnaby alone with her loyal dog, Joey.
Once her pail was full of mushrooms, she turned to head back toward her truck.
Fort Smith Yellowknife map Joanne Barnaby was mushroom picking when she got separated from her friend near Fort Smith, N.W.T. (CBC)
"I heard this growl behind me. There was a long, tall, very, very skinny wolf. A black wolf. And his legs were spread and his hair was standing, and he was growling, and baring his teeth."
Joey charged the animal, but the wolf stood its ground.
"I don't think Joey expected that," Barnaby says. "I didn't want him hurt, of course, but I also knew that if the wolf got Joey, I'd be next."
'Trying to wear me down'
The wolf started pacing back and forth in the direction of the truck. Barnaby says it was forcing her to go farther east, away from the highway.
"It took me a while to realize that he knew what he was doing. He was trying to wear me down. He was trying to separate Joey and I," she says.
"I think he was weak. He didn't look healthy. He looked old to me ... I don't think he wanted to take us both on."
What followed was a 12-hour hunt. The wolf continued to pursue Barnaby and Joey, as they were pushed farther from her truck.
'I started praying to not let the mosquitos drive me insane.'
- Joanne Barnaby
"He was dogged. He was just determined," Barnaby says. "I was in trouble."
Barnaby said she became dehydrated, her calves and thighs were aching, and there was another vicious attacker that was testing her mental strength.
"I was going crazy with mosquitoes. There were zillions of mosquitoes."
Dangerous plan pays off
At about 4:30 a.m., Barnaby heard a loud noise. She quickly recognized it as a mother bear. Listening closely, trying to drown out the buzz of mosquitoes, sure enough she heard a cub respond from far away in the distance. The two bears had been separated.
"I realized that there was a chance that the mother bear would tackle the wolf if she felt that the wolf was a threat," Barnaby explains.
"So I made the choice of walking towards the cub."
It worked. After walking about 20 minutes, Barnaby's dangerous plan paid off.
"I heard this big crashing behind me and realized that the mama bear had attacked the wolf, or maybe the other way around, I don't know, but they were fighting and I could hear the wolf yelping and I could hear the mama bear growling and I could hear all this crashing and I just took off!" Decision to live
Finally free of the wolf, Barnaby and Joey both "perked right up" when they saw a lake.
"I had brought one can of beer with me. Silly choice," she laughs. "That little can of beer ended up saving my life."
She drank can after can of water and finally took a break.
'This one was a decision to live and it was really powerful.'
- Joanne Barnaby
"I started praying to not let the mosquitos drive me insane. Then I just started talking to people I love, some of whom are still with us, some of whom have passed.
"As I talked to them and told them how much I loved them," Barnaby said, her voice breaking, "everything they mean to me, it energized me, and I was determined to see everybody again.
"All night I had been making decisions of sorts, but this one was a decision to live and it was really powerful."
Lessons learned
When the pair finally climbed onto the highway Saturday morning, Barnaby saw vehicles parked on the road about a kilometre away.
"I was like, 'OK, we're good. We're really good.'"
A police truck, carrying a local RCMP officer and a Parks Canada worker, drove to Barnaby and Joey.
"They both jumped out of the truck and we had big hugs, and of course they were full of questions, but they didn't have any bug spray for me! I couldn't believe it!" she laughs.
Barnaby is still kicking herself for not bringing her gun into the bush, calling it a "huge mistake."
"Don't do what I did. Don't go without your gun," she says. "Anything can happen.
"If I had had that gun, it would've been a very short situation."
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#5555457
06/17/16 04:41 PM
06/17/16 04:41 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 847 N.E. Pennsylvania
trappertom52
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 847
N.E. Pennsylvania
|
I guess she won't forget that for a while.
Let a man meet a bear robbed of her cubs rather than a fool and his folly. Proverbs 17:12
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#5557596
06/20/16 10:14 AM
06/20/16 10:14 AM
|
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,760 james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,760
james bay frontierOnt.
|
Did you look up Andrew Stanley,famous star of the wild north FHA?
Last edited by Boco; 06/20/16 10:14 AM.
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Boco]
#5557664
06/20/16 11:52 AM
06/20/16 11:52 AM
|
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,965 Northwest Territories
muskrat411
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,965
Northwest Territories
|
Did you look up Andrew Stanley,famous star of the wild north FHA? He should just keep going past Simpson and come see Muskrat411 we'll jet boat up the Rat River look for the Mad Trapper! If he goes up the Nahanni River, Headless Valley is named after my great uncles. we'll there headless corpses any ways. True story, Game of Thrones Deh Cho style.
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#5557703
06/20/16 12:45 PM
06/20/16 12:45 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,760 james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,760
james bay frontierOnt.
|
What about Albert Faille the famous gold prospector.Did he ever find his gold up the nahanni?
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Boco]
#5557757
06/20/16 02:32 PM
06/20/16 02:32 PM
|
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 4,421 Yukon
yukon254
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 4,421
Yukon
|
What about Albert Faille the famous gold prospector.Did he ever find his gold up the nahanni? Turns out the gold he was looking for was on the Yukon side. A prospector stumbled on it a few years back while caribou hunting......about 5 km from my cabin. I have since sold that line, but talked to a geologist friend this spring that did some work there last fall....he said he has never seen anything like it...just roll back the moss and the gold is right there. I trapped all over that country for 20-years and never knew it!!
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: yukon254]
#5557923
06/20/16 05:50 PM
06/20/16 05:50 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,965 Northwest Territories
muskrat411
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 1,965
Northwest Territories
|
What about Albert Faille the famous gold prospector.Did he ever find his gold up the nahanni? Turns out the gold he was looking for was on the Yukon side. A prospector stumbled on it a few years back while caribou hunting......about 5 km from my cabin. I have since sold that line, but talked to a geologist friend this spring that did some work there last fall....he said he has never seen anything like it...just roll back the moss and the gold is right there. I trapped all over that country for 20-years and never knew it!! Everything likes the Yukon better, especially gold.
|
|
|
Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#5562909
06/26/16 09:50 AM
06/26/16 09:50 AM
|
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,760 james bay frontierOnt.
Boco
trapper
|
trapper
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 47,760
james bay frontierOnt.
|
Looks like a great trip.It also looks like an old burn where your tent is set up.
Forget that fear of gravity-get a little savagery in your life.
|
|
|
|
|