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Three recent Colorado moose attacks all involved people with their dogs
Three recent Colorado moose attacks all involved people with their dogs

CBS News

time2 days ago

  • General
  • CBS News

Three recent Colorado moose attacks all involved people with their dogs

Colorado Parks and Wildlife is urging caution after three separate moose attacks in three days across the state. The department says it's mostly a coincidence that all of the attacks happened in a stretch of only a few days. The incidents range from Fairplay on Friday, May 30, to Grand Lake on Saturday, May 31, and one in Steamboat Springs on Sunday, June 1, where a woman was actually flow to a hospital because of her injuries. In all three incidents, the people attacked had dogs with them, and in the Fairplay attack the dogs were not on a leash. CPW said without question unleashed dogs are by far the most prevalent instigation for moose attacks in Colorado. "If you have your animal off leash, you're not only potentially adding that danger and injury to your animal, but also to yourself," Rachael Gonzales, a spokesperson for CPW. "So a lot of times your dogs, their instinct, they're going to run back towards their human, which then that turns that animal, in this case, a moose, back towards you as well." In Friday's incident in Park County, two women walking with their dogs were trampled by a moose. They escaped by climbing onto a roof and used a fire extinguisher to haze the moose away. CPW said no serious injuries were reported. Saturday was a more serious attack in Grand County. A cow moose charged a couple and knocked a woman to the ground, who then crawled under a small storage area next to their house, according to CPW. Her partner shot and killed the moose in self defense. A calf was later euthanized by CPW due to concerns about its ability to survive in the wild without its mother, and inability to be rehabilitated. Sunday brought yet another attack in Routt County, where a woman walking leashed dogs was seriously injured by a cow moose. A man who was paddleboarding close to the attack in River Creek Park stopped to help and was also kicked. The park, located in Steamboat Springs, is now closed through Wednesday as CPW assesses the area. "In that case, she had her dogs on a leash," Gonzales said. "Unfortunately, she was just at the wrong place at the wrong time." The best advice? Keep dogs on a leash and give moose plenty of space. Gonzales said you can watch for a few signs a moose is getting irritated, and more likely to charge. "Things like licking its lips, its ears are pinned back ... the little heckles and hairs on its back are going to be sticking up. It may be pacing back and forth," Gonzales explained. "Keep an eye on those signs, because if you start to see that, that's your signal that that moose is uncomfortable for whatever reason."

Woman and dog injured in moose attack at Kincaid Park, Anchorage police say
Woman and dog injured in moose attack at Kincaid Park, Anchorage police say

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Woman and dog injured in moose attack at Kincaid Park, Anchorage police say

May 17—A woman and a dog were injured in a moose attack Friday evening at Kincaid Park, an Anchorage Police Department spokeswoman said Saturday. The incident reportedly involving a cow moose with a calf nearby happened around 5 p.m. Friday, APD spokeswoman Tess Hagensieker said. Hagensieker said the woman was taken to the hospital with injuries described as not life-threatening, and one dog was hurt as well. Another person in the woman's party called police after the attack occurred, according to Hagensieker. Where in Kincaid Park the incident occurred and additional details weren't immediately available from police. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game was briefed on the incident, Hagensieker said. Additional information about Friday's attack from Fish and Game wasn't immediately available Saturday. During the calving season this time of year, cow moose in particular may be aggressive, according to Fish and Game's webpage on "What to Do About Aggressive Moose." People can be injured when the animals charge, stomp and kick as a result of feeling threatened. "In late spring and summer, cow moose with young calves are very protective and will attack humans who come too close," Fish and Game says on its website. "If you see a calf on its own, be very careful because you may have walked between it and its mother — a very dangerous place to be." Moose have also been known to attack dogs, which they sometimes view as enemies due to their resemblance to wolves, a natural predator of moose. Wildlife encounters such as human-wildlife conflicts and injured, orphaned or aggressive animals can be reported to Fish and Game on the agency's website.

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