The other side of Snusdog!

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  • wa3zrm
    Member
    • May 2009
    • 4436

    #1

    The other side of Snusdog!

    Teenager Fights Back in Rabid Fox Attack
    WMBB ^ |

    How far would you go to protect your family's pet? One teenager's encounter with a rabid fox showed just what she would do to defend the dog she loves so much.
    "It just looked almost like a pet, like a dog," recalls Kathie Fisher. "Kinda stood there and sniffed the air with its head."
    Kathie Fisher recalls her experience about a week ago. She was getting groceries out of her car and turned around to find a wild fox.
    "He didn't seem mean or aggressive, it wasn't foaming out the mouth," Fisher said.
    Nobody thought anything of it. Then the fox came back the next day and came after Vinny - her daughter Morgan's dog.
    "I heard him barking, and I seen the fox grab him and take him out around by the neck, so I panicked and ran outside," Morgan said.
    The 16-year-old says from there, she went into attack mode. She says she grabbed the fox up and started choking it. Then she tried to knock the fox out by slamming it into a pole.
    Seeing that the fox wasn't giving up, she ran into her kitchen and grabbed a knife.
    "I moved my hand and I stabbed him twice," Morgan said. "I thought he was dead so I started getting up and he jumped up and he bit me and scratched me."
    It took sheriff's deputies to shoot the fox down, after it attempted to attack them as well. On Monday you could still see three bullet holes in the ground.
    The fox was tested and discovered to have rabies, prompting the Department of Health to issue a rabies alert. Morgan and Vinny are currently being treated with rabies shots for the next few weeks.
    While most health officials would advise against Morgan's actions, she says it was a no-brainer.
    "I didn't want to lose him, I just got him," Morgan said. "I don't care what would have happened to me, as long as he was safe."
    That rabies alert is still in effect in Gulf County. Health officials are urging you to stay away from wild animals.
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  • Snusdog
    Member
    • Jun 2008
    • 6752

    #2
    Damn....better think twice before trying to slip in a little tittie squeeze on that honey

    Your Ass might get kut up
    When it's my time to go, I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my uncle did....... Not screaming in terror like his passengers

    Comment

    • Dirty Hippy
      Member
      • May 2011
      • 81

      #3
      Damn, I really surprised that he got bit by a fox, even a rabid one. Foxes in nature are VERY shy animals and are even one of the most hardest animals to trap, as they usually freak out at even the slightest human trap. (Trust me on this, I have to bleach my traps if they are even touched ONCE by human hands.)

      I could understand a coyote, their quite fearless even around human dwellings, I shot 37 last winter (Used a .17 center fire Remington, while I was assisted by my angry ass pack of coon dogs.)

      A young boy in my area was bit last year was bit by a rapid coyote.........hunting prevents disease!

      The wild life of today is not ours to do with as we please. The original stock was given to us in trust for the benefit both of the present and the future. We must render an accounting of this trust to those who come after us.
      Theodore Roosevelt

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      • Snusdog
        Member
        • Jun 2008
        • 6752

        #4
        There is nothing more beautiful than a pack of coon dogs on scent under a full moon in the woods of the Appalachian mountains and no sound more eerie floating up the mist from the gorge deep below

        DH,

        I would love to see some pics of your dogs if you got any
        When it's my time to go, I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my uncle did....... Not screaming in terror like his passengers

        Comment

        • Dirty Hippy
          Member
          • May 2011
          • 81

          #5
          Originally posted by Snusdog
          There is nothing more beautiful than a pack of coon dogs on scent under a full moon in the woods of the Appalachian mountains and no sound more eerie floating up the mist from the gorge deep below

          DH,

          I would love to see some pics of your dogs if you got any
          Oh my, it is VERY rare that I meet someone that feels the same way I do about especially about coon hunting, I'm honored by you statement Mr Dog.

          I have been coon hunting since my pa took me out as a little guy. In my family it is a long honored tradition.

          There is absolutely nothing better in this world than having a miners light on your head, a .22 in your hand and a howling dog off in the distance of a deep woods, treeing a coon.

          The experience is truly breathtaking.

          I will be happy to take pictures of my Plot and Treeing Walker and post them on Snuson!

          Comment

          • Snusdog
            Member
            • Jun 2008
            • 6752

            #6
            Originally posted by Dirty Hippy
            Oh my, it is VERY rare that I meet someone that feels the same way I do about especially about coon hunting, I'm honored by you statement Mr Dog.

            I have been coon hunting since my pa took me out as a little guy. In my family it is a long honored tradition.

            There is absolutely nothing better in this world than having a miners light on your head, a .22 in your hand and a howling dog off in the distance of a deep woods, treeing a coon.

            The experience is truly breathtaking.

            I will be happy to take pictures of my Plot and Treeing Walker and post them on Snuson!
            I can't wait to see them!
            When it's my time to go, I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my uncle did....... Not screaming in terror like his passengers

            Comment

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