Objects appear deadlier than they look...
As another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter.
I post this as an insight into psychological conditioning, that an armed citizen would not even intervene to protect their children nor an innocent pet, when attacked by a pack of murderous wolves.
The story is of a hunter in Minnesota of grouse. He sent his German wirehair pointer into the woods where it locked up on grouse, as he and two under the age of 5 children stood there.
Suddenly the dog yelped in terror and came racing out with a wolf trying to kill it, biting at it's hind legs.
The dog running in terror leapt into the pick up cab, as fortunately the window was open, and the dog saved itself.
Now the scene degrades as the wolf circles the pick up, and more wolves appear out of the woods.
It never occurs to this person to shoot the wolves. Not when the dog was about to be murdered, not with the wolf circling the pick up, not with maybe the wolf might jump in the cab and murder the dog, not with two children under 5 years of age, which the wolves could have attacked and slaughtered, because the best this guy could do was eventually fire one 20 gauge round into the air, at which the wolves ignored him and kept looking to murder the dog named Henry.
What is worse is this quote:
Bailey and the boys continued to hunt during the afternoon in an area about 10 miles from where they had encountered the wolves. Bailey shot one grouse. The boys seemed to find the wolf encounter fascinating, he said.
“They thought it was the coolest experience in the north woods,” he said. “They were seeing all kinds of wolves all day long.”
So you get this, the two Darwin candidate children thought this was all wonderful, NO FEAR AT ALL. This was due to the adult not telling them to be alarmed, that it never apparently occurred to the adult that a dog's guts being ripped out as it fled for it's life, and the wolves eating these children alive, was not something that registered.
These Snowflakes have been so conditioned about nature, that wolves are endangered, that they are untouchable, just like all the elite are immune to criminal prosecution. I have noticed this on outdoor sites in grizzly bears attack people, and these neo outdoor idiots sound exactly like PETA tards in defending the bear, instead of the human.
Henry the dog was the only person with any sense. Upon being left to be eaten by wolves, Henry fled for his life, but you will notice Henry was already aware enough of the situation to not stop by the guy with the gun, as Henry knew he would be ate in trusting that non protection, so Henry was the most intelligent in jumping in the pick up window as the only real protection and safety.
It is why this quote says it all:
Henry apparently had made up his own mind after the incident.
“The dog refused to leave the truck,” Bailey said. “I couldn’t get him out of the truck the rest of the day.”
Yes Henry assessed the situation, that Snowflakes are zero protection when it comes to humans, even with guns.
It makes me wonder how long the Eurasians will require before they figure out that in armed America, which does not rise up in 1776 Revolution in the 21st century are the same wolf watchers who will just stand around and be ate by Chinese, Russians and 3rd World Muslims.
The German wirehair is the only one with any sense to run from the wolves and not to trust his protector with a gun.
Murderous danger runs 5 feet from a Snowflake and it is not perceived as murderous danger.
Nuff Said.
Northern Minnesota hunter has harrowing encounter with pack of wolves
ISABELLA, Minn. — Justin Bailey of Keewatin was hunting ruffed grouse near Isabella on Tuesday morning when a wolf chased his hunting dog out of the woods.
“He was coming at me 100 miles per hour, and right behind him was a wolf, biting at his heels,” said Bailey, 33. “They probably passed five or six feet from us.”
Bailey was standing at the edge of the road with his son, Andrew Bailey, 3, and his nephew, Brock Bjelland, 5, of Marble, whom he had brought along for the day of hunting.
The wolf chased the dog, Henry, a 1-year-old German wirehaired pointer, back to Bailey’s pickup in the road, he said.
“The dog jumped in the window of the truck, and the wolf did a quick lap around the truck,” Bailey said.
That’s when Bailey noticed two more wolves coming out of the woods at the edge of the road. Three more came out about 100 yards down the road, Bailey said.
“I think we saw six total,” he said. “I was yelling at the one that went around the truck. He wasn’t very timid, that’s for sure. He was 15 feet from the truck and turned around and watched me put the kids in the truck.”
During the encounter, Bailey fired one round from his 20-gauge shotgun into the air in an effort to scare off the wolves.
“They didn’t even flinch,” he said.
His dog was not injured, Bailey said.
The incident occurred about 11 a.m. Tuesday about four miles from Isabella, he said. Bailey’s nephew had seen a grouse at the edge of the road run into the woods. Bailey pulled his truck over and let Henry out.
“I sent him into the woods to find the bird,” he said. “He did one pass in there and got on point. I was on the road… He had the bird pinned down (pointed). Then he made this awful screech — it was like a cross between a yip and a cry. He must have been about 30 yards away.”
That’s when Henry came charging out of the woods with the wolf nipping at his hind legs. Bailey said the wolves “looked pretty healthy.”
“They’re starting to put on their winter coats,” he said.
Bailey said he never thought about shooting at any of the wolves.
“I played it back in my head,” he said. “Yes, I would have shot at the wolves because the kids were there, but it happened so fast it didn’t even cross my mind.”
In Minnesota, gray wolves were most recently classified as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act as of December 2014. Wolves may be not be killed except in defense of human life.
Bailey and the boys continued to hunt during the afternoon in an area about 10 miles from where they had encountered the wolves. Bailey shot one grouse. The boys seemed to find the wolf encounter fascinating, he said.
“They thought it was the coolest experience in the north woods,” he said. “They were seeing all kinds of wolves all day long.”
The encounter has made Bailey rethink hunting grouse with Henry.
“It makes me not want to bring my dog in the woods anymore,” he said. “It makes you think twice.”
Henry apparently had made up his own mind after the incident.
“The dog refused to leave the truck,” Bailey said. “I couldn’t get him out of the truck the rest of the day.”
agtG