logo
Man Drops Gun, Manages to Outrun Polar Bear on Snowmobile in Heart-Racing Moment Caught on Camera

Man Drops Gun, Manages to Outrun Polar Bear on Snowmobile in Heart-Racing Moment Caught on Camera

Yahoo29-04-2025

A man was caught on camera managing to outrun a polar bear on a snowmobile after the animal chased after him in the Arctic Circle
The person made it to the vehicle and sped away, as the animal briefly ran after him in a clip filmed by onlookers
The polar bear eventually gave up the chase and was seen walking away in the opposite direction
A man luckily had a snowmobile nearby after coming face-to-face with a polar bear in the Arctic Circle over the weekend.
On Sunday, April 27, the person noticed the animal running in his direction before seemingly firing shots in a bid to deter it in a heart-racing moment captured on camera by onlookers.
After a brief pause, the polar bear started to run toward the man in the clip, before he decided it was time to ditch the gun and escape to safety.
He then leapt onto a snowmobile and sped away in the video obtained by Newsflare. Despite initially remaining hot on the man's heels for a moment, the bear eventually gave up the chase.
"Very brave guy!" one person behind the camera said in the video, while another added, "Damn, that guy is brave!"
After the brief chase, the polar bear sat down in the snow, looking around at their surroundings, before getting up and walking away in the opposite direction. The exact location of the incident was not immediately revealed.
Related: 'Surreal' Photo of Polar Bear Napping in Field of Flowers Stuns Photo Contest — See the Other Winners!
Polar bears have been "spending more time ashore in more places, and for longer periods" in recent years as the "Arctic warms and the sea ice melts," according to Polar Bears International.
"This has led to an uptick in polar bear-human encounters, sometimes with tragic results," the conservation organization said on its website.
Alysa McCall, who is the director of conservation outreach and a staff scientist at Polar Bears International, previously told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) of why the animals might attack, "A healthy polar bear that's out on the sea ice is not going to have a lot of incentive to attack a human being."
As previously reported by PEOPLE, in December, a man was seriously injured in Ontario, Canada, after trying to prevent a polar bear from attacking his wife in their driveway in Fort Severn First Nation near Hudson Bay.
Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
McCall said at the time that polar bears are usually hunting for seals out on the ice in that area, but "when the ice breaks up, they come inland in search of food," per CBC.
"It could be that [when] this attack happened, maybe this bear was a little hungrier than usual," McCall insisted, adding that climate change meant the animals might be "coming into contact with communities and people more than they used to" due to sea ice patterns changing.
"If you're attacked by a polar bear, definitely do not play dead — that is a myth," McCall advised, according to the outlet. "Fight as long as you can."
Polar Bears International didn't immediately respond when contacted by PEOPLE for a comment on the latest Arctic Circle incident.
Read the original article on People

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Smoky skies send air quality to record lows in southern Ontario
Smoky skies send air quality to record lows in southern Ontario

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Smoky skies send air quality to record lows in southern Ontario

Prolific smoke that's blown across North America and beyond over the past couple of weeks will bring reduced air quality to southern Ontario through Friday. 'As smoke levels increase, health risks increase,' Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) said in its special air quality statement for the region on Thursday. This risk includes the Greater Toronto Area, Hamilton, Ottawa, Windsor, and much of cottage country. DON'T MISS: Significant wildfire activity across the western half of the country has sent plumes of smoke from the Arctic to the tropics—and even across the pond toward Europe. Most of the smoke we've seen of late over southern Ontario has remained elevated, contributing to hazy skies and vivid sunsets. Rain and strong winds that pushed through the region Wednesday and Thursday helped push some of that smoke down to the surface, reducing air quality and leading to a distinct burning smell at times. The front responsible for this pattern continues to linger across southern Ontario—forcing the smoke to linger through Friday, as well. Special air quality statements are in effect for almost all of southern Ontario through Friday as the low-level smoke blows across the area. The poorest air quality in the Greater Toronto Area is expected to persist through Friday. Thick smoke Thursday evening and overnight brought the Air Quality Index (AQI) for much of the region to extreme lows, rivalling the GTA's record-lowest average AQI over a 24-hour period and breaking that very record in London. Previously, much of Ontario's record-lowest AQIs were set in June and July of 2023—Canada's most destructive wildfire season to date. The reduced air quality could prove irritating to vulnerable people, such as those living with chronic respiratory problems. 'You may experience mild and common symptoms such as eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches or a mild cough. More serious but less common symptoms include wheezing, chest pains or severe cough,' ECCC says in its statement. Unfortunately, the poor air quality will to linger into the weekend as a ridge of high pressure in the atmosphere will continue to suppress the smoke to lower levels. Click here to view the video

Wedding Planner Hired a Witch from Etsy to Ward Off Bad Weather. Then It Rained the Whole Day (Exclusive)
Wedding Planner Hired a Witch from Etsy to Ward Off Bad Weather. Then It Rained the Whole Day (Exclusive)

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Wedding Planner Hired a Witch from Etsy to Ward Off Bad Weather. Then It Rained the Whole Day (Exclusive)

Wedding planner Sarah Wintersteen hired an Etsy witch to cast the "perfect wedding spell" for her clients' outdoor wedding after there was a "tropical cyclone warning" in their area "[We] were not relying on an Etsy witch to fix our problems but if there was even a 0.0001% chance it was going to work, I was willing to spend $9 to try!" Wintersteen tells PEOPLE Even though "it was pouring" all day, the spell still "worked" because "everyone just decided to embrace the rain"A wedding planner playfully blamed an Etsy witch for bad weather on her clients' big day. A few days before Robyn Kincade and Blake Panarisi's May 31 wedding at Flora Farms in San José del Cabo, Mexico, it became clear that a tropical storm was headed their way. The couple's wedding planner Sarah Wintersteen, owner of Sistered States, began taking precautionary measures for the completely outdoor venue, suggesting that the pair get a tent. However, the manager of Flora Farms noted that "rain in Cabo is so rare" and that after 18 years of working at the venue, she's only seen it rain on a wedding day four times. So, the day before their wedding, the bride and groom decided to not get a tent. "I quoted the tent to the couple, and they decided to take their chances and hope that the storm would weaken or move courses," Wintersteen tells PEOPLE. With a "tropical cyclone warning" in the area, Wintersteen didn't want to risk the couple and their 160 guests getting drenched by heavy rain all day, so she decided to take measures into her own hands. "As a planner, I was working with all the vendors on the best course of action," Wintersteen explains. "I had seen some other people online mention hiring an Etsy witch to make rain go away on their wedding day so I figured, why not?" Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Wintersteen had never hired an Etsy which before, but found one on the online marketplace who charged just $9 after searching "wedding weather witch." "It was completely for fun and for the plot — we already have multiple rain plans in place and were not relying on an Etsy witch to fix our problems but if there was even a 0.0001% chance it was going to work, I was willing to spend $9 to try!" Wintersteen says. Because the witch needed the bride's birthdate, Wintersteen made sure to get the couple's permission before hiring them. "I purchased the 'perfect wedding spell' so technically not a weather spell, but the spell promised that the couple would have a 'perfect wedding day,' " Wintersteen says. "The page said they cast spells within 24 hours of receiving the order and I received confirmation from the Etsy page that our 'spell had been cast.' " Kincade and Panarisi were admittedly "a little stressed about the rain" in the days leading up to their wedding, but after they decided against the tent "a lot of the stress went away." "We all decided that we were going to embrace whatever was going to happen!" Wintersteen shares. Around 10 a.m. on the wedding day, it started to rain and "did not let up all day." "The ceremony started at 5:30 p.m. and the reception ended at 11p.m. — it rained the entire time!" Wintersteen recalls. She continues, "Guests arrived with umbrellas for the ceremony, but there was almost no use — it was pouring. I think after the ceremony, the bride and groom and their guests pretty much gave up on staying dry or looking a certain way." A few days after the wedding, Wintersteen posted clips of the poor weather at the venue on TikTok, writing in an onscreen text overlay, "When I paid an Etsy witch for no rain on the wedding day and it down-poured all day." She posted her viral video, in which she had to wring out water from her dress, to the trending audio that goes, "That was rude. That was pretty f------ rude." "There goes my $9," she added in the caption. is now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Even though Wintersteen was jokingly blaming the witch for the rain, the weather didn't ruin the wedding at all. "Everyone just decided to embrace the rain!" Wintersteen says. "We even moved some of the tables out of the bar/barn for guests to dance in after dinner, but they all still decided to dance in the rain for HOURS! I would guess for a lot of guests, it has been years since they had the opportunity to just dance in the rain, so that is what they did!" If anything, the witch's spell worked exactly as promised. Wintersteen says, "Even though it still rained on the wedding day, the witch did promise a 'perfect wedding' and after the wedding was over, the couple did say that they wouldn't change a thing — so it looks like it worked!" Read the original article on People

June snow dusts Scotland's highest mountain tops
June snow dusts Scotland's highest mountain tops

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

June snow dusts Scotland's highest mountain tops

Snow has dusted the tops of some of Scotland's highest hills and mountains. Meteorological summer started on Sunday, but cold air from the north has brought some chilly weather. BBC Scotland weather presenter Judith Ralston said: "Snow on the hills of Scotland is not unusual in early June. "The colder air has come down from Iceland and, with the strength of wind, it reached Scotland before getting much time to warm up." The cool conditions are expected to continue for the next few days, but the forecast is for the high winds to ease and fewer showers from Thursday. Some of Scotland's mountains, including the Cairngorms, had snowfall around this time last June. In 2010, more than 100 skiers took advantage of ski tows being open at the Cairngorm Mountain resort near Aviemore for the first time in midsummer. Previously at this time of year people were able to ski in the Cairngorms, however, they had to trek to where the snow was. Two temporary rope tows were provided over two days. Cairngorm Mountain, along with Scotland's other mountain ski centres, had benefited from lengthy periods of freezing conditions over the winter. Snow in June on Scotland's mountains as Arctic air sweeps in Reduced mountain snow patches point to climate change

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store