Posted on 03/03/2016 5:26:48 AM PST by SJackson
AZY MOUNTAIN -- On a recent cold night, I decided to wash some dishes.
My wife and I live in a little dry cabin up near Hatcher Pass, which is to say we don't have running water. So I put a big pot on the propane stove to heat, rousted the dogs and took the 5-gallon bucket of dirty dishwater from under the sink to go dump it in the outhouse.
I was a little over halfway there when the heavy crunching started in the snow about 15 feet away, behind a large birch tree.
The dogs, Biscuits and Slippi, had been lazing in front of the wood stove all evening and were even slower to react than me. By the time they started barking, I had already hustled ahead to the outhouse and was just starting to open the door when a second moose charged around the far side and rushed by me, so close I could have reached out and felt its fur.
The moose skidded to a stop right where I'd been walking a moment before, head lowered aggressively, threatening the dogs.
With a little distance now between us -- maybe 12 feet -- I could tell it wasn't a big moose, just a juvenile male. But I'm not a total idiot. Even a small moose can plow through a 195-pound man as if he were a sock puppet. The other small moose was now emerging from the birch stand, so my odds weren't getting any better.
It's dangerous enough to be so close to a couple of agitated animals, but what worried me most was the one I didn't see. Because at that point I hadn't determined if they were on their own or if Mom was around, maybe standing right there in my blind spot -- just beyond the thin plywood door.
I love encounters with wildlife. That's one of the main reasons my wife and I gravitate toward the rustic life in Alaska. But as much as I love gazing at wild things, I don't really relish the idea of getting trampled or kicked, so I ducked the rest of the way inside the outhouse and let the door clap shut behind me.
If you're trapped Here's some advice if you ever find yourself trapped in an outhouse under similar circumstances:
1) Don't think about how terrible it would be if a hypothetical mama moose heard you shuffling around and kicked in the door so your wife found you after she got home and a reporter found out and wrote about it, so everyone on the planet learned your name because you died by getting kicked to death in an outhouse.
2) If possible, go back in time and bring a coat, bear spray and some mirrors on sticks that will help you quickly figure out where the moose are standing when things get chaotic outside.
3) Go ahead and empty that dishwater bucket while you're waiting, because an empty bucket is about to come in handy.
I dumped the bucket down the Hole of No Return, then stood there listening. The sounds were muffled, and I couldn't tell if they were coming from a small moose a few feet in front of the outhouse or a bigger, meaner, more maternal one getting ready to destroy the first person to pop out.
To make things worse, the dogs were barking like crazy, but not working together with any kind of wolf-like strategy that might have driven the moose away. In fact, when I cracked the door to get a peek, I could see the larger dog was now sitting over on the porch, his hackles up, acting tough. The smaller one was barking somewhere on the other side of the moose, probably behind some trees. I wanted to yell at the dogs to shut up but one of the moose was now within kicking distance of the thin outhouse door.
For 10 minutes, I stood in there, alternately holding my breath, listening, peeking out, trying to figure out if these were larger calves with their mother or adolescents experiencing the joy of messing with humans.
Punk teenage moose Finally, I'd seen enough and convinced myself they were old enough to be on their own. But they were still too close for me to leave the outhouse. So there I continued to wait while the dogs barked and the moose meandered 3 or so feet at a time, looked around, backtracked, grunted, took another couple of steps the other way. Eventually, they got used to the ruckus and just started eating birch saplings.
That was enough. They were still closer than I liked but I wasn't going to stand there in an outhouse all night while a couple of punk teenage moose snacked.
So I opened the door and threw the empty bucket so it landed with a clatter right behind the nearest moose. They took off into the trees, maybe 20 feet before they felt safe.
I stuck my head out of the outhouse and called the dogs. Both of them came over from the porch, wary, even scared, as if that thing in the outhouse wearing the headlamp and talking with my voice might be some kind of undercover moose.
Then the three of us made the short walk back to the cabin, where the dogs continued to laze about in front of the fire and I finally got started on those dishes.
"Not Again" Alaska Ping!
Are mooses that dangerous? I imagine a mother with babies could be. Since I’m thinking of relocating to Maine, I need to know!!!
Yes they are very dangerous but they won’t eat you.
More people are hurt by moose every year than bears, but like the guy ahead of me said, they don’t eat you.
It can has cheez?
The biggest danger is probably hitting one in your car, they aren’t “lightweights” like deer. Beyond that they’re large wild animals, I’d use caution. In this case two yapping dogs didn’t help. I emerged from a tent once to find two munching on trees in my campsite, they didn’t give me a thought, but they were likely acclimated to humans. But I gave them a wide berth.
Why doesn’t that make me sigh with relief??
What happens if you are driving on a lonely road in Maine and come across one? Turn the car around while screaming?
Ok. In A Walk in the Woods, Bill Bryson stands near one and simply enjoys them.
And I repeat, this is not making me feel comfortable!
1,800 pounds of do whatever the heck I want, he says of the bull, which he identifies as Cyrus. I can respect that. Take the long way, huh? McConaughey then turns the car around and heads back the way he came. Thank you, Cyrus, he says.
He needs some better dogs.
Wow, I don’t remember that, but as paranoid as he was about the wildlife in that book, they must be pretty tame - normally.
It’s essentially a comic book. I must say I enjoyed it a lot.
“What happens if you are driving on a lonely road in Maine and come across one? Turn the car around while screaming?”
IMHO:
1) Don’t drive into the moose unless the alternative is hitting another car or driving into a ditch.
2) Try being patient to see if it will move.
3) If that doesn’t work, try beeping the horn once. If it gets closer...stop beeping.
4) If all else fails, turn around, drive away, no screaming necessary. ; )
The Maine trooper told me they charge the headlights after I met a moose at 3 AM in A Pinto. Blew out the windshield an caved in passenger side of roof. He told me a girl in an MGB was decapitated a week earlier. The one I hit was a little one, a juvenile female only about 500 lbs.
“...just a juvenile male...”
A “yute” moose.
Thank you! That’s the first good advice I’ve gotten here!
I did see one in the distance once.
Do they actually charge if annoyed?
A moose bit my sister, once.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.