Saturday, April 15, 2017

Brave Man Risks Jail Time To Save A Dying Baby Bear


When a man named Corey Hancock was trekking on the Santiam River Trail recently, he spotted a child undergo in determined need of help. 

Hancock, who is a photographer, recounts the incident on his Facebook page, the place he explains that it started raining that day at some point of his hike when he noticed the undergo cub two feet off the trail. 

“Laying there on his back, seeming via all appearances to be dead,” wrote Hancock. “His lips were blue. His eyes were open however unmoving and hazy. The rain was pouring down, drenching his belly. I may have considered a shallow breath.”


Credit: Corey Hancock/Facebook

Recalling passing by using this equal trail an hour before, Hancock knew the cub wasn’t there earlier, so he feared the bear’s mom might not be far away. Assuming he might also be attacked at any moment, he took a speedy photograph of the dying cub and retreated a brief distance down-slope towards a cliff-edge overlooking the river. “I remembered hearing someplace that bears don’t pass as nicely going downhill. Any benefit I could get, I used to be taking,” Hancock wrote. 

From Hancock’s role by way of the cliff, he watched the cub and scanned the location for any sight or sound of other animals. Minutes passed, and he watched the tiny bear’s arm twitch a couple of times, indicating that he used to be alive. He knew he couldn’t survive tons longer underneath these conditions, and he wasn’t going to stand there and watch the cub die in the rain. 


Credit: Corey Hancock/Facebook

So, putting his very own lifestyles at risk, Hancock rushed to the cub and wrapped him up like a infant in his flannel shirt. “Finally, with this bundle of undergo cub in one arm, I took off running toward the trailhead and my waiting vehicle,” he wrote. The complete time, he feared a raging mother undergo would come after him, as black bears can scent people from 500 yards away. Finally, Hancock reached his automobile and he took the cub out of his stuff-sack and examined him on the passenger’s seat. 

He snapped a photograph of the bear and uploaded it onto his Facebook, asking for assist on the place to take the loss of life infant bear. Hancock performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on him, and via this time, his Facebook put up used to be getting attention.

“The subsequent advice I received used to be to convey the cub to the Turtle Ridge Wildlife Center, where they had a worker who lived on-site. I phoned and, positive enough, Mary was once organized to greet us and admit the undergo when we arrived. I gave him the identify Elkhorn, which refers to the region the place I located him,” Hancock wrote. 


Credit: Corey Hancock/Facebook

Mary may want to see right away Elkhorn was once close to death. He used to be starving and dehydrated, so Mary put Elkhorn on a heating pad and injected him with electrolyte fluids. “The next morning, another Turtle Ridge worker, named Charles, phoned to let me comprehend that the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife had contacted him, and were on their way to pick up the cub,” wrote Hancock. 

Apparently, Hancock may want to have been fined $6,000 for assisting the bear, or even worse- sent off to reformatory for a year. Luckily, this kind-hearted man was once no longer punished and used to be able to see Elkhorn temporarily earlier than he was once taken away. 

Credit: Corey Hancock/Facebook

“For now, the ODFW is taking correct care of him in his recovery. They’re restricting Elkhorn from human contact, as much as possible, which includes visits from the press. That way, the probabilities of him imprinting on any of us will be minimal. 

Meanwhile, they’re exploring his options. Perhaps, thru the sharing of this story, any one out there who’s concerned in one of the better sanctuaries, or who has full-size expertise in re-wilding black undergo cubs, will offer Elkhorn an invitation,” Hancock wrote. 



We are so completely satisfied that Hancock actually risked his very own life to store this dying infant endure because, in the end, he wound up saving the bear’s life. 

Credit: Corey Hancock/Facebook
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[Featured Image Credit: Corey Hancock/Facebook]


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