Lethal App News » south carolina

Teenage boy dies in rip current

Posted: July 27th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, riptides | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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After suspending the search for a missing 13 year old swimmer, authorities plan to resume the search in Garden City at first light, around 5:30 am, Friday morning.

The 13-year-old Maryland boy disappeared around 12:30 Thursday afternoon while swimming in the ocean, in between 15th and 16th Avenue South in Garden City.

Authorities say it is now considered a recovery mission instead of a rescue mission.

Dozens of first responders spent the entire day searching the area with hundreds of people looking on, even helping.

Authorities were in the water — rafts, boats, jet skis, and in the air with helicopters. On lookers even joined the search, as about 100 people locked arm in arm and combed the shore, searching for the missing teen.

“It’s always difficult when it comes to any child. It’s a lot harder to swallow, a lot harder to take,” said Sgt. Robert Kegler, with Horry County Police.

Authorities say the boy was swimming with seven other friends in the ocean when someone noticed several of the boys were struggling in the water.

That’s when a lifeguard jumped in to help bring the boys to shore, but one was left behind in what were rough waters all day long.

“The most challenging has been the physical conditions, the weather itself. You can feel the strong winds out here, the currents a lot higher. The waves are a lot stronger than it normally is. It’s made it very difficult,” said Kegler.

Those who were in the water noticed.

“Very tiring, because you have to keep fighting your way back, it’s exhausting,” recalled George Denton, of Surfside Beach.

“As you can see it’s windy and the current is pulling really bad towards the north,” said Randy Johnson, of Garden City.

“The currents are really bad. They’re pulling you down the beach, and they’re also pulling you out. The waves are pretty busy. One comes right after another. It’s hard to time them like normal surf, so all those combined together, it can drag you out of here. If you’re not careful out there, it’s bad,” said Denton.

Bad, even for really good swimmers

“A majority of swimmers who are really good still can only swim two to three miles per hour, a rip (current) can go as fast as six miles per hour, but we recommend they get on their back and let the rip (current) carry them out to the head of the rip (current) or try to swim parallel to the beach, but don’t try to swim towards the beach,” said Duke Brown, with Horry County Beach Patrol.


Father dies while saving son from rip current

Posted: July 27th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, riptides | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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PAWLEYS ISLAND, SC (WMBF) – A family continues to mourn the loss of a Myrtle Beach man who died while trying to rescue his son in Pawleys Island Thursday afternoon.

Robert Beebe, spokesman for Midway Fire Rescue says the father was fishing in the surf when his son was hit by a wave and pulled under water. The man went in after his son and saved him, but was pulled back under the water.

The man, identified as Salomon Sifontes by Georgetown County Coroner Kenny Johnosn, was able to save his son, but in the end, lost his own life.

The reality of what happened on Thursday still hasn’t hit 7-year-old Darwin, who says he remembers seeing his father in those final moments.

“My dad tried to help me, and we were like going really far away, and he couldn’t breathe anymore and he drowned and he was floating with his mouth in the water,” he recalled.

Sifontes’s brother, Moises Sifontes, says he couldn’t believe the news when he first heard.

“They were together all the time. When he sees the picture, he starts crying, and says ‘I want my daddy,’” explained Moises.

Moises says his brother did the right thing by saving his son.

“We are hurt, but we are glad [Darwin] is alive,” said Moises.

The Sifontes family says they would like to send Salomon’s body back to his home country of Honduras, but so far, do not have enough money to do so.

The father, rescuers estimate, was underwater for 30 minutes before he was brought ashore.

An autopsy Friday confirmed Sifontes died as a result of drowning.


Gator Near Popular Cafe in South Carolina

Posted: May 27th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: alligators, urban wildlife, wildlife | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Alligator shows up at diner, but isn’t on the menu

Alligator shows up at diner, isn’t invited back

Wade Davis peered over the yellow tape into the pine woods Wednesday, looking for the gator.

“Where there’s one, there’s gotta be more — right?” he said.

Davis, 39, is one of hundreds of people who have dropped by Betty’s Diner on Bluff Road the past few days after hearing reports of a huge alligator behind the popular Bluff Road restaurant.

  • Gator facts

    Alligator information from the S.C. Department of Natural Resources

    • At least 100,000 alligators are estimated to live in South Carolina, much fewer than the estimated 1.5 million in Florida.

    • The alligator’s natural range in South Carolina is as far north and west as the fall line, an area characterized by rocky shoals in rivers. In the Midlands, that’s in downtown Columbia on the Congaree and Broad rivers and just below the Lake Wateree dam on the Wateree River.

    • Of the nine documented alligator attacks on humans in South Carolina in the past 30 years, more than half were provoked by people.

    • The S.C. Department of Natural Resources established the first alligator hunting season in four decades last year. Hunters who won limited permits in a drawing killed 362 gators. This year’s season runs Sept. 12-Oct. 10.

The alligator — between 10 and 14 feet, estimates went — climbed a hill from a clearing in some woods about 140 yards back from the road. It then crawled over dry, flat terrain to get within about 30 yards of Betty’s Diner. From that vantage point, the gator no doubt could smell the country cooking — burgers, yams and chicken.

“I check under my car when I go out,” said Betty Mack, 59, the diner’s chief cook and restaurant’s namesake who says her specialty is her fast-selling, secret-recipe, nonalcoholic green fruit drink she calls “Jesus.”

The gator hung out all day Friday.

At times, crowds of people surrounded it, taking photographs and videos, poking it with a stick and even touching it.

State officials came out Friday afternoon. Mack and others wonder why they left it where it was, instead of capturing or killing it.

After that, the gator vanished.

Its disappearance only increased the talk.

Restaurant owner Horace Mack, Betty’s son, put up the yellow tape and “No Trespassing” signs to warn people not to go into the woods.

“We have neighborhoods with children all around here. The gator could get to them,” Betty Mack said.

State Department of Natural Resources officials told Betty Mack they couldn’t do anything with the gator since it was not on the Macks’ property or causing danger to anyone.

In fact, said DNR alligator program coordinator Jay Butfiloski, if an alligator is in its own habitat — where this one was — the department rarely intervenes. Intervening means the department would hire an alligator specialist to remove or kill the creature.

It has to be an emergency situation in which life or property is threatened for DNR to do that, Butfiloski said. An alligator on a road as night falls or an alligator at a schoolyard would probably be an emergency, he said.

“Every situation is different and has to be judged on its own.”

In many cases, DNR gives property owners a permit to hire their own alligator removal specialist if the animal comes back on their property and they feel it threatens people.

That’s what DNR did in this case. It also gave the diner a list of about 70 alligator specialists to call for removal if the alligator shows up again.

That didn’t please Betty Mack.

“They were real nice,” she said, “but they didn’t give us the answer we wanted.”

Butfiloski said alligator attacks on people are exceedingly rare in South Carolina. The state’s 100,000 alligators — which reach as far west as Columbia — attack fewer than one person a year, he said.

Fear of alligators is far more common than actual alligator attacks, he said.

Alligators generally try to retreat with people around, he said. But the reptiles can become aggressive if provoked, or if protecting a nest, he said. He advised people to keep a distance.

“It’s like snakes. The more you mess with them, the more they’re likely to bite you.”

Alligators are usually found near water, but at Betty’s Diner, there wasn’t any water nearby. In fact, for several hundred yards in the woods, it was dry land. A large pond, named Alligator Lake, is about 1½ miles to the southwest.

“Alligators sometimes walk between bodies of water. Maybe that’s what this one was doing,” said Butfiloski.

Neighbors also wish DNR had removed the gator.

Less than a half-mile up the road, at the Eastway subdivision where dozens of children live, residents were worried.

“You want to be concerned about the kids,” said Jason Downs, 42. “It was too big to let wander off.”

Betty Mack says she’ll keep looking under her car.

That’s not because she wants to kill and cook it, even though alligator tails are a delicacy with their taste of fishy chicken.

No, it’s because the gator might find her to its liking.

“If he caught me, he’d probably eat me up,” she said.


Most Dangerous North American Beaches – Sharks

Posted: May 13th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: sharks, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

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NORTH AMERICA’S TOP SHARK-ATTACK BEACHES

Stephen RegenoldMay 13, 2009
 

Where to swim at your own risk in North America

 

The year was 1916, and a hot July had delivered thousands of beachgoers to the Jersey Shore. Waves shrugged on the sand, and swimmers bobbed in their bloomers and caps, escaping the heat in the surf and swells of tepid Atlantic waters.

See our slideshow of North America’s Shark-Attack Beaches.

 What happened next—beginning with a death on Long Beach Island—would forever alter America’s collective consciousness toward swimming in the sea: In an unprecedented 11 days, five major shark attacks took place along the Jersey Shore, four of which were fatal.

Reports cited blood turning the water red and sharks following victims toward the beach. Dorsal fins spiked from placid water. Appropriately, a media frenzy ensued. Patrol boats were deployed to kill sharks offshore. Some beaches installed wire mesh to sequester swimmers from anything big and toothy out beyond the break.

 America has never recovered. Indeed, the Jersey Shore attacks of 1916—though an anomaly never seen before or since—branded an image of sharks as monsters that has trickled now through several generations.

“The common public perception today of a shark is that of a man-eater,” said George Burgess, an ichthyologist at the University of Florida who maintains a database called the International Shark Attack File. “We have an innate fear for big predators and natural forces we can’t control.” But as Burgess and others point out, death by shark bite is extremely rare. Shark experts cite statistics to show you can swim and surf with nary a worry at almost any beach on the planet. You are not a seal. Sharks do not want to eat you.

Or do they?

The International Shark Attack File (ISAF), which relies on decades of data, cites more than 2,000 fatal encounters. At beaches like New Smyrna, the cold statistics can become frighteningly real. To date, 210 attacks have been reported there, and in 2007, three swimmers were bitten by sharks and hospitalized.

See our slideshow of North America’s Shark-Attack Beaches.

 Despite the paranoia, millions of people each year surf and swim—literally—with the sharks.

 A top example is New Smyrna Beach in Volusia County, Fla., where Burgess said tiger and black-tip sharks thrive. “Most people who have swum in and around New Smyrna have been within 10 feet of a shark in their lifetime,” he said.

 In Northern California—where deep waters and seal populations draw great white sharks—surfers suit up at places like Stinson Beach to catch waves in a potentially deadly habitat. Patric Douglas, owner of Shark Diver, an ocean guiding outfit in San Francisco, calls Stinson “the granddaddy of all shark beaches.” He said, “It’s common to see 18-footers buzz by surfers bobbing in the waves.”

North America is home to dozens of beaches like New Smyrna where swimmers and sharks intermix, even though the humans may never know it. When the rare attack happens, Burgess said, it’s usually a predatory mistake. “In the surf zone, where many attacks happen, sharks need to make quick decisions,” he said. “Humans on surfboards—hands splashing, feet kicking—can trigger a shark to think there’s trouble or a wounded animal, and it looks like an easy meal.”

 With its thousands of miles of coastlines and millions of beachgoers, the United States sees more shark-human interaction than any other country. Search the ISAF database and you’ll find incidents at beaches from South Carolina to Oregon. There are so many reports, in fact, that California, Florida, Hawaii, North Carolina and Texas each have dedicated sections in the ISAF.

See our slideshow of North America’s Shark-Attack Beaches.

On the North Shore of Oahu, Hawaii, tiger and hammerhead sharks mix with dolphins and humpback whales. There are dozens of popular surf beaches there, including Velzyland Beach and the Leftovers Break to name two. Though untold thousands surf and swim there each year without incident, attacks do occur.

But according to Laleh Mohajerani, executive director of the shark conservation organization Iemanya Oceanica, sharks are not looking to interfere with humans in the water. Our shark-attack fears are irrational, she said. “You are more likely to be hit by lightning.”

 Indeed, there’s no arguing the numbers. Of the millions of people who enter the ocean each year, almost none are touched.

 But for most people, fiery emotions override even the coldest numbers. A single scary story—be it on the news or in an effects-heavy Hollywood production—will destroy the efforts of hundreds of scientists trying to communicate on research and logic.

From Hawaii to the Caribbean, there are 10 beaches among the most infamous for sharks on the planet. Take a dip if you dare.

See our slideshow of North America’s Shark-Attack Beaches.


3 Gators Found Outside Their Range in South Carolina

Posted: May 13th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: alligators, wildlife | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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3 alligators spotted in Lake Wylie 

 

06:36 PM EDT on Wednesday, May 13, 2009

 

By ALEX REED / NewsChannel 36 

ROCK HILL, S.C. — Not one, but three alligators are living in Lake Wylie, not far from where children swim.

The boat ramp at the Elks Park Campground near Rock Hill is filled with people daily now who are looking for the gators. It’s a popular swimming area for children here. That’s what has people worried.

It’s tough to see, but NewsChannel 36 caught video of the head of a 2- to 3-year-old alligator swimming around Lake Wylie.

“They’re coming too close with our little children out here,” said Julie Orr.

She’s visited the campground for years. She says her first alligator sighting in Lake Wylie was years ago.

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But this is a first for Jon Meadows. He says this is “exciting because you never see them out here.”

There are pictures of one of gators, which a local camper caught on his fishing pole. They show the gator’s head to be about the size of a soda can. Copies of the pictures are passed around the campground as everyone wants a look.

It’s a frightening sight for Orr, who says, “We have young children that swim out here.”

She says she called the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources for help.

“I would think they would send somebody out here to get them, but they say no, they’re not a danger to us,” Orr said.

The wildlife biologist told NewsChannel 36 alligators aren’t considered a threat to people until they reach at least 6 feet in length.

But even these small 3-feet-long gators are enough to drive many away from their usual swimming hole.

“I’m not swimming out here anymore. I’m not touching that water anymore. I’m staying out here. I’m being safe,” said Meadows.

The DNR biologist explained that baby alligators like these are outside their natural habitat and were most likely dumped by a pet owner who kept them illegally. He said the reptiles will feed on animals the size of frogs for the next few years.

Orr says the alligators seem to like baby geese.

“We had plenty of them and they’re just gone,” she said.

The biologist said that an alligator attack on adults, children or pets is highly unlikely. That’s why the officers probably won’t remove them. He says it is illegal for anyone to catch or kill the reptiles without a permit.


Lightning Strikes Smoker in South Carolina

Posted: May 9th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, lightning | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Unlucky Strikes, perhaps?

Bluffton man lit up when he steps out to light up

Gariti keeps good humor through lightning strike ordeal

When Scott Gariti stepped out of his Bluffton home for a cigarette Tuesday evening, he got a bigger light than he expected.

Although he doesn’t remember much of the experience, he was struck by a bolt of lightning as a severe thunderstorm swept through the area. His was one of the more than 1,000 strikes that flared across the Beaufort County sky during the two-hour storm.

On Thursday, Gariti summarized his experience this way: “I got lit up before I could light up.”

Gariti said that when he opened the door to have a smoke, he saw a bright flash. He awoke a few seconds later on his living room floor with his dog, Bailey, licking his face. The force of the strike had knocked him back inside.

He was hit by a two bits of good fortune, as well, he said.

Though the bolt tossed him about five feet, he landed on his dog’s pillow near the front door, which cushioned his landing.

And it also knocked his cell phone out of his pocket. The device landed near his hand.

“I couldn’t move (and) that’s how I was able to call 911 because the phone was just right there,” he said.

He first called his wife, Alison, who was at work.

“He just said, ‘I’ve been hit,’ when I answered the phone,” Alison said, a line that reminded her of something out of “Saving Private Ryan.”

“He didn’t say what had hit him, just that he was in pain. When he finally told me, I was frightened, obviously.”

Paramedics rushed him to Coastal Carolina Hospital in Hardeeville, where he was released later that night. He had a dislocated hip and wrenched back, he said.

“I don’t know if I would say I’m lucky,” he said. “I wasn’t really hurt.”

Gariti’s brother, Joe, thinks “lucky” is exactly what his brother was.

Scott is the “luckiest unlucky guy in the world,” he said.

And, now, a little cautious as well.

While Gariti said thunder and lightning scare him a little, the incident wasn’t a shock to his sense of humor.

His friends have made sure of that.

“People have started calling me ‘Sparky,’ ” he said. “That’s probably the worst part of this.”

Other local incidents

Eleven people were struck by lightning last year in South Carolina, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association’s Web site. Most of those came in one incident in July when eight men were struck while standing in a Spartanburg County peach orchard.

The last person reportedly struck by lightning in Beaufort County was a 22-year-old man, who was killed while walking along a Hilton Head Island beach July 30, 2007, according to the NOAA Web site. His mother, who was walking with him, also reportedly was struck by the same bolt.

In northern Beaufort County, the last report of a person being struck by lightning was in August, 1999, when a Lady’s Island man was struck during an afternoon thunderstorm. The last report from Bluffton was in 1998.


Bobcats attack men

Posted: May 9th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bobcats, wildlife | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Two attacked by bobcats

By PHIL SARATA, T&D Staff Writer  Thursday, May 07, 2009 

BRANCHVILLE — Two Branchville men have reported being attacked by bobcats.

While at least one of the men undergoes rabies treatment, officials are trying to figure out if one or two felines were involved in the separate attacks.

Both attacks took place in Branchville, the first around 9 p.m. Tuesday and the second shortly after midnight. The bobcat in the first attack was able to escape. The bobcat in the second attack didn’t.

Both attacks left the victims with injuries that required medical attention. One man required stitches.

Hugo D. Valentine says he was informed by the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control late Thursday afternoon the animal that attacked him had rabies.

Describing the attack, Valentine said, “I was clearing a piece of land off Old Orangeburg Road with a backhoe Tuesday night. Me and some friends had piled up the debris and were burning it.

“Around 12:30, I felt something on my leg. I looked down and a bobcat had latched onto my thigh. I grabbed it by the ears and tried to hold it on the ground. We were able to pin the front paws down but it was still trying to bite me. Even though my friend was standing on its back legs, the bobcat’s back claws were still scratching up my hands. It died before I could get my knife. It looked as though we had smothered it.”

Valentine said he was treated at a hospital.

“All I have are scratches on my hand and teeth marks in my thigh,” Valentine said. “They treated the wounds and gave me a shot of antibiotics on the left side of my butt.

“I brought the cat to the hospital. I spoke to a DHEC representative and I was asked to put the head on ice so it could be tested for rabies. Once DHEC told me it did have rabies, my doctor started my treatment.”

DHEC spokesman Thom Berry said that he had not been able to confirm with Orangeburg DHEC officials the dead bobcat had tested positive for rabies as of early Thursday evening.

“If the case involves a human, we would recommend that the individual proceed with a rabies treatment, just to be on the safe side,” Berry said.

Branchville police say that an ambulance had responded to the scene of an earlier bobcat attack at 9:17 p.m. on Smoak Street.

Branchville Town Clerk Treesa Suggs said that victim suffered injuries to his arms and head.

“He came by town hall (Thursday),” Suggs said. “He had about 16 stitches in his head and several more in both his arms.”

Attempts to reach the victim were unsuccessful.

Bobcat attacks don’t happen much, said S.C. Department of Natural Resources Chief of Wildlife Statewide Projects, Research and Survey Derrell Shipes.

“We have had a lot of raccoons and foxes over the years with rabies but bobcat attacks are unusual,” Shipes said. “Most are afraid of humans and won’t attack unless provoked, such as being caught or cornered. They are not rare but they are also not abundant in South Carolina. They do not live close to humans.”


Lightning Strikes in South Carolina

Posted: May 5th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, lightning | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Lightning strikes keep firefighters across Beaufort County busy

Firefighters across Beaufort County scrambled Tuesday evening in the wake of several lightning strikes as a severe thunderstorm tore through the area. A Blufffton man was struck by lightning but wasn’t seriously injured.

In another incident, Bluffton Township Fire District firefighters battled a blaze in Belfair Plantation on Manchester Court. That fire was likely started by a lightning strike and destroyed the home’s attic, Lt. Robert Payne said. Investigators were on the scene Tuesday night to determine the cause of the blaze, but the home is likely a total loss, he said.

Bluffton firefighters received 11 weather-related reports concerning homes and businesses on Fording Island Road, Regent Avenue and Lakeland Drive, among others. No damage reports were available Tuesday afternoon.

The man who was struck by lightning was standing near a tree on Haddon Avenue in Bluffton, Payne said.

In all of the incidents, no major injuries were reported.

No damage estimates were available late Tuesday.

The Beaufort Fire Department was called to six possible structure fires after lightning struck a number of Beaufort homes and businesses during a violent thunderstorm Tuesday.

Of the six calls, only one was an actual fire, said Beaufort Fire Chief Sammy Negron.

Negron said firefighters were called to a home on Pigeon Point Road, and quickly extinguished a small fire caused by lightning.

Firefighters were also dispatched to homes and businesses on West Street, Charles Street, Phillip Street and Newcastle Street as well as the Pizza Inn on Boundary Street.

No damage was reported in any of those lightning strikes, Negron said.

That was not the case on Lady’s Island, however.

There, two homes were struck by lightning, leaving one uninhabitable, officials said.

The first fire was reported just before 3 p.m. in the Telfair neighborhood after lightning hit a tree, destroying a home’s electrical system and sparking a small fire on the exterior of a home, Lady’s Island-St. Helena Fire District spokesman Lee Levesque said. The rain contained most of the damage, he said.

Moments later, another fire was reported in the Lucy Creek neighborhood that burned a hole in the roof and damaged the attic, he said.

That home was ruled uninhabitable, Levesque said.

Beaufort County EMS and Beaufort County Sheriff’s deputies assisted, he said.

The National Weather Service in Charleston reported more than 1,000 lightning strikes and about an inch of rain in Beaufort and Jasper counties during the two-hour storm, Meteorologist John Quagliariello said.

The severe thunder storm was aided by warm air and an unstable atmosphere, he added.

About 170 people lost power in Beaufort County during the storm, according to Palmetto Electric engineers.

There is a 30 to 40 percent chance of another thunderstorm today, meteorologists said.


South Carolina Mail Carriers Victim to Dog Attacks

Posted: May 5th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: dog, wildlife | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Attacks on South Carolina Mail Carriers on the Rise

STAFF REPORTS
Published: May 4, 2009

But in the seven months of Fiscal Year 2009 so far, a shocking increase in dog bite incidents across the state has occurred.  “In an average year, like last year, we’ll see 6-8 cases,” said US Postal Service District Safety Manager Marvin Howard, “but from October 1 to current, we’ve sustained 26.  During the month of March alone, we added 10 more.  High numbers like these usually happen in larger population centers like Houston or Chicago, not South Carolina.”

Howard, his staff, Postmasters and Postal Managers district-wide are responding to the development by increasing training and awareness for all delivery employees.  District Communications Coordinator Harry Spratlin is reaching out to the public through the media to ask for increased awareness of animal control.  Even though South Carolina has a leash law, not all counties have animal shelter resources, so Postal employees must rely on dog owners to take action in those areas. 

When surprised by a new dog or a loose dog exhibiting aggressive behavior, a carrier has only dog repellant and a mail satchel to use as a shield.  Dog owners should remember that carriers are instructed not to exit their vehicles if an uncontrolled dog is roaming the neighborhood, so mail delivery may be curtailed for a day without warning. 

After returning to the office, carriers fill out Form 1778, the dog warning card, and an attempt will be made to contact the owner.  “Dogs are very affectionate in a family setting,” said Howard, “but by their nature, they are territorial animals who can unpredictably attack an outsider.”

“Owners frequently say their dog has ‘never hurt anyone’,” said Howard, “but the Postal Service is tasked with providing a safe working environment for employees every day, so we can’t wait to see if an uncontrolled dog will attack or not.  Dog owners should also be advised, the Postal Service has legal means to recover medical expenses for an injury.  Even small breed dogs have the potential to inflict injuries that can threaten a carrier’s career.  Our best approach is to issue an appeal to all dog lovers: please, be responsible owners: control your pets.”
How to avoid being bitten:

Don’t run past a dog. The dog’s natural instinct is to chase and catch prey. 
If a dog threatens you, don’t scream. Avoid eye contact. 
Try to remain motionless until the dog leaves, then back away slowly until the dog is out of sight. 
Don’t approach a strange dog, especially one that’s tethered or confined. 
While letter carriers are discouraged from petting animals, people who choose to pet dogs should always let a dog see and sniff them before petting the animal.  

Tips for dog owners:

Obedience training can teach dogs proper behavior and help owners control their dog in any situation.  
When the letter carrier comes to your home, keep your dog inside, away from the door, in another room, or on a leash. 
Don’t let your child take mail from the letter carrier in the presence of your dog. Your dog’s instinct is to protect the family.  
Spay or neuter your dog. Neutered dogs are less likely to bite. HSUS statistics reflect that dogs that have not been spayed or neutered are up to three times more likely to be involved in a biting incident than neutered or spayed dogs.  
Dogs that haven’t been properly socialized, receive little attention or handling, or are left tied up for long periods of time frequently turn into biters.


South Carolina Woman Struck by Lightning, Survives

Posted: May 3rd, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, lightning | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Woman Struck By Lightning

ELIZABETH OWENS
Published: May 2, 2009

A woman is struck by lightning and lives to tell about it.

Spartanburg County Dispatch says the woman was struck Saturday afternoon outside of a home on Mountainview Circle.

Maria Johnson says she was at a neighbor’s home for a baby shower when a storm hit her street.  “It was terrible.  The rain was coming down very fast it looked like a tornado situation,“ Johnson said.

She says as she was just walking out the door she felt the bolt of lightning.  “Like if you’ve been shocked if you been touched by someone inside your house times fifty or a hundred,“ she said.

E-M-S checked Johnson out.  “My whole left side was tingling and painful here and there,“ she said.  Johnson wasn’t seriously hurt. 

“I thank God.  You think what if that had been my last minute,“  Johnson said.