Lethal App News » Victoria

American tourist dies amid lightning

Posted: June 10th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, lightning | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) – Bahamas police say an American tourist who died while swimming in the ocean may have been struck by lightning.

Assistant commissioner Glenn Miller says authorities are still waiting for autopsy results to confirm what killed Larry Jackson of Hernando, Miss.

The 44-year-old tourist went swimming with his brother and wife Tammy shortly after checking into a Wyndham Hotel in Nassau's Cable Beach. Heavy rain and thunder hit the island around the same time.

Hotel spokesman Robert Sands said Thursday that Jackson was pulled from the water and his brother and hotel staff administered CPR until an ambulance arrived. He was pronounced dead on arrival to a Nassau hospital on Wednesday.

via Victoria Advocate | Bahamas: American tourist dies amid lightning.


Woman in Georgia loses breast to Brown Recluse Spider venom.

Posted: May 25th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: spiders, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Link

A woman from Georgia has lost her breast after she was bitten by a poisonous spider and slipped into a coma.

Victoria Franklin is lucky to even be alive after being bitten by a spider back on April ninth, and calling her twin sister after she realized that something was very wrong.

According to her twin, Valerie Dapaa, 51, by the time she took her sister to the hospital, her breast was the size of a loaf of bread.

“Her breast was three times the size, black as tar and had a horrible smell,” she said.

“They call it the smell of death,” said Dapaa. “The doctors said they didn’t know if they couldsave her. She was diabetic and her sugar was up to 700.”

Doctors rushed her into surgery where her breast was cut away, effectively saving her life.

“I don’t even remember being bit,” Franklin stated.


Bear Attacks in Canada since 2005

Posted: May 25th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Link

More common than you’d think.

Sept. 16, 2009: Rory Chapple, of Fort St. John, British Columbia, saved his life by plunging an arrow into the neck of a grizzly bear after he tripped and the bear fell on top of him. The grizzly has not been found.

Sept. 8, 2008: Reg MacDonald, a former MLA who sat for 16 years in the New Brunswick legislature, was riding his motorbike when a bear jumped on his bike and sent him flying through the air into a deep ditch. The 74-year-old was in a coma for 3 weeks after he was rescued.

Sept. 10, 2008: A black bear swam across a river, climbed on a dock and then jumped on a boat to attack a man on Vancouver Island who was fishing at a marina. Friends and passersby came to the man’s aid and used gaffs (fishing spears), knives and a hammer to pull the bear away. The bear was finally killed with a gaff. The victim was airlifted to a Victoria hospital with cuts to his arm and upper body.

Aug. 6, 2008: Neighbours pelted rocks at a black bear outside Coquitlam, B.C., as it attacked a screaming woman in her suburban driveway. After a three-minute struggle, the 115-kg bear went behind the house where it was later shot and killed by police officers. The woman was in stable condition with serious injuries on her arms and head and with bite marks all over her body, according to police.

July 17, 2008: A Belgian tourist to Lake Louise was jogging alone on an abandoned railway northwest of the resort town when she surprised a black bear. Thirty minutes of terror ensued and she even “played dead” while a bear sank its teeth into her. She escaped the attack with only minor injuries.

May 26, 2007: A 15-year-old was chasing her cat through a wooded area in the town of Georgina, Ontario when she ran into a black bear. She received only superficial scratches to her left forearm when she startled the bear. The two then ran in opposite directions.

Sept. 2005 – A black bear killed Dr. Jacqueline Perry and wounded her husband Marc Jordan. The 30-year-old couple was attacked at Missinaibi Provincial Park, north of Chapleau, Ont. Jordan wounded the bear with a Swiss army knife while trying to free his wife. The bear was later shot and killed in a remote area of the park near where the attack occurred. This is just the fourth time since 1978 that a black bear has stalked and killed anyone in Ontario. The most recent attack took place in 1992.

Sept. 2005 – A Manitoba man fends off a black bear in early September, just one week after a black bear killed another man in the province.

August 26, 2005 – A 69-year-old man is fatally mauled by a black bear while out picking plums north of Winnipeg. It’s just the third time a black bear has killed a person in Manitoba’s history.

June 2005 – There have also been four grizzly attacks in Alberta since June, including a fatal one on a female jogger near Canmore. Jogger Isabelle Dube, 35, a competitive mountain biker originally from Quebec, was married and had a young daughter. She was the first person killed by a bear in Alberta since 1998. Since 1992, there have been two deaths and 23 maulings by bears in Alberta.


Game warden attacked by gator in Texas

Posted: May 21st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: alligators, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Link

WOODSBORO–A game warden is recovering after he was bitten by an alligator in Refugio County. The gator was in the middle of a road and the game warden was trying to capture it when the gator apparently decided it didn’t want to be captured.

The alligator attack happened about a month ago. The game warden has been rehabilitating ever since then. For the first time today, he went back to the scene of the gator attack.

This is the first time Pinky Gonzales returned back to Farm to Market Road 136 near Woodsboro since the alligator attack. It was a month ago and he was trying to remove the gator from the roadway.

Gonzales jumped on top of the alligator to tape his mouth, but he was on him for 15 seconds, a little too long to close his mouth. The gator bit him and wouldn’t let his hand go.

“I am going to trying to pull my hand out of his mouth and somehow almost in two, but I got my hand back,” said Gonzales, who has been a game warden for Texas Parks and Wildlife for 23 years.

After getting his hand out, Gonzales said he and the gator rolled and then the reptile was coming right at him, going for the kill.

“I remember seeing him come at me with his mouth wide open,” Gonzales said. “He was very aggressive and very angry. I am right handed and he grabbed a hold of my left hand where i can shoot him with my right hand.”

“He looked like he got beaten up pretty bad,” said Captain Henry Balderamas, a fellow game warden, who drove him to Victoria to get medical treatment. “He was very well bloodied. He still had all of his functions and was thinking clearly.”

He suffered severe nerve damage to his hand from the alligator attack. He fracture his cheek bone and lost a couple of teeth.

He won’t return back to work for another month, but this attack won’t stop him from doing his job he has loved for nearly a quarter of a century.

“I should have stuck with what I have been doing and not take the chance I took,” Gonzales said, talking about the mistake he made with the alligator. “I’ll continue answering these calls.”


Killer Whale Kills Trainer At Sea World – In Front of Horrified Audience

Posted: February 24th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: unexpected, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Link

The term “Killer Whale” isn’t a cute nickname. This is terrifying. I don’t understand how this particular whale has continued to participate in shows – this is the third human it has killed. And, don’t I remember children sometimes standing poolside as these whales swim below? How is that ever safe? I understand that the whale may have had no predatory intent – but rather playfulness – but that doesn’t make it any less dangerous, or the trainer any less dead.

Whale kills trainer as horrified spectators watch
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
The Associated Press
Wednesday, February 24, 2010; 9:46 PM

ORLANDO, Fla. — A SeaWorld killer whale snatched a trainer off a poolside platform in its jaws Wednesday and thrashed the woman around underwater, killing her in front of a horrified audience. It marked the third time the animal had been involved in a human death.

Distraught audience members were hustled out of the stadium immediately, and the park was closed.

Trainer Dawn Brancheau, 40, was one of the park’s most experienced. Her sister said Brancheau wouldn’t want anything done to the whale that killed her because she loved the animals like children.

Brancheau was rubbing Tilikum after a noontime show when the 12,000-pound whale grabbed her and pulled her in, said Chuck Tompkins, head of animal training at all SeaWorld parks. It was not clear if she drowned or died from the thrashing.

Because of his size and the previous deaths, trainers were not supposed to get into the water with Tilikum, and only about a dozen of the park’s 29 trainers worked with him. Brancheau had more experience with the 30-year-old whale than most.

“We recognized he was different,” Tompkins said. He said no decision has been made yet about what will happen to Tilikum, such as transfering him to another facility.

A retired couple from Michigan told The Associated Press that they were some stragglers in the audience who had stayed to watch the animals and trainers.

Eldon Skaggs, 72, saw Brancheau on platform massaging the whale. He said the interaction appeared leisurely and informal. Skaggs that the whale “pulled her under and started swimming around with her.”

Skaggs said an alarm sounded and staff rushed the audience out of the stadium as workers scrambled around with nets.

Skaggs said he heard that during an earlier show the whale was not responding to directions. Others who attended the earlier show said the whale was behaving like an ornery child.

The couple left and didn’t find out until later that the trainer had died.

“We were just a little bit stunned,” said Skaggs’ wife, Sue Nichols, 67.

Another audience member, Victoria Biniak, told WKMG-TV the whale “took off really fast in the tank, and then he came back, shot up in the air, grabbed the trainer by the waist and started thrashing around, and one of her shoes flew off.”

Two other witnesses told the Orlando Sentinel that the whale grabbed the woman by the upper arm and tossed her around in its mouth while swimming rapidly around the tank. Brazilian tourist Joao Lucio DeCosta Sobrinho and his girlfriend were at an underwater viewing area when they suddenly saw a whale with a person in its mouth.

The couple said they watched the whale show at the park two days earlier and came back to take pictures. But on Wednesday the whales appeared agitated.

“It was terrible. It’s very difficult to see the image,” Sobrinho said.

A SeaWorld spokesman said Tilikum was one of three orcas blamed for killing a trainer in 1991 after the woman lost her balance and fell in the pool at Sealand of the Pacific near Victoria, British Columbia.

Steve Huxter, who was head of Sealand’s animal care and training department then, said Wednesday he’s surprised it happened again. He says Tilikum was a well-behaved, balanced animal.

Tilikum was also involved in a 1999 death, when the body of a man who had sneaked by SeaWorld security was found draped over him. The man either jumped, fell or was pulled into the frigid water and died of hypothermia, though he was also bruised and scratched by Tilikum.

At the stadium, what appeared to be a body covered with a black shroud could be seen lying on the concrete near the water as the animals swam just a few feet away.

Later Wednesday, SeaWorld in San Diego also suspended its killer whale show. It was not clear if the killer whale show has been suspended at SeaWorld’s San Antonio location, which is closed until the weekend.

According to a profile of Brancheau in the Sentinel in 2006, she was one of SeaWorld Orlando’s leading trainers. It was apparently a trip to SeaWorld at age 9 that made her want to follow that career path.

“I remember walking down the aisle (of Shamu Stadium) and telling my mom, ‘This is what I want to do,’” she said in the article.

Brancheau worked her way into a leadership role at Shamu Stadium during her career with SeaWorld, starting at the Sea Lion & Otter Stadium before spending 10 years working with killer whales, the newspaper said.

She also addressed the dangers of the job.

“You can’t put yourself in the water unless you trust them and they trust you,” Brancheau said.

Steve McCulloch, founder and program manager at the Marine Mammal Research and Conservation Program at Harbor Branch/Florida Atlantic University, said the whale may have been playing, but it is too early to tell.

“I wouldn’t jump to conclusions,” he said. “These are very large powerful marine mammals. They exhibit this type of behavior in the wild.

“Nobody cares more about the animal than the trainer. It’s just hard to fathom that this has happened.”

Brancheau’s older sister Diane Gross, of Indiana, said the trainer “would not want anything done to that whale.” Gross said her sister loved working at the park and thought of the animals like she would her own children.

Gross tells the Associated Press that news of her sister’s death “hasn’t sunk in yet.”

Mike Wald, a spokesman for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration office in Atlanta, said his agency had dispatched an investigator from Tampa.

Wednesday’s death was not the first attack on whale trainers at SeaWorld parks.

In November 2006, a trainer was bitten and held underwater several times by a killer whale during a show at SeaWorld’s San Diego park.

The trainer, Kenneth Peters, escaped with a broken foot. The 17-foot orca that attacked him was the dominant female of SeaWorld San Diego’s seven killer whales. She had attacked Peters two other times, in 1993 and 1999.

In 2004, another whale at the company’s San Antonio park tried to hit one of the trainers and attempted to bite him. He also escaped.

Wednesday’s attack was the second time in two months that an orca trainer was killed at a marine park. On Dec. 24, 29-year-old Alexis Martinez Hernandez fell from a whale and crushed his ribcage at Loro Parque on the Spanish island of Tenerife. Park officials said the whale, a 14-year-old named Keto, made an unusual move as the two practiced a trick in which the whale lifts the trainer and leaps into the air.