Mt. Goat Kills Human
Posted by: Loren Coleman on October 18th, 2010
Anyone who has been out hiking, searching for Sasquatch, tracking mystery cats, and otherwise going into the backcountry must be aware of how dangerous known animals can be. There have been several cases, in recent weeks, of animal attacks. None may be more shocking to folks than to hear a mountain goat has killed a man over the weekend.
One of about 300 mountain goats in Olympic National Park squares off with a photographer on the Switchback Trail in July 2008, when park officials warned of an aggressive goat in the Klahhane-Hurricane Ridge-Switchback Trail area. Barb Maynes, park spokeswoman, said that it is not known if this is the goat that was killed after it fatally gored a Port Angeles hiker Saturday [October 16, 2010]. — Photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz/Peninsula Daily News
Here are some notes from the local paper:
Park wildlife biologist Patti Happe this week will assist in a necropsy of a goat that killed a hiker as part of the investigation into what happened Saturday.
The necropsy will include a physical evaluation of the goat as well as testing for a variety of diseases by a certified veterinary pathologist in Monroe, said park spokeswoman Barb Maynes on Sunday.
Along with an evaluation of a goat, which was shot and killed by park rangers after it killed hiker Robert Boardman by goring him through the thigh, park officials will interview people who were with Boardman shortly before the attack and any other witnesses who were in the area.
Maynes said she did not know if Boardman was injured through the front or back of his thigh.
“No one saw the injury happen. I don’t know that we have enough right now to say,” she said.
“We know that there was some kind of encounter, but we don’t know exactly what transpired.
“We are trying to really learn everything that we can.
‘It is a tragedy’
“It is a tragedy that we are taking extremely seriously, and we are trying to learn as much as we possibly can, and as we do, we will be releasing that information and sharing it with the public.”
Boardman, 63, was hiking with his wife, Susan Chadd, and their friend, Pat Willits, on the Switchback Trail to Klahhane Ridge about 17 miles south of Port Angeles.
The three had stopped for lunch at an overlook when a goat began moving toward them at about 1:20 p.m.
When the goat began acting aggressively to the trio, Boardman urged Chadd and Willits to go on while he attempted to get rid of the goat and then leave himself, Willits told an off-duty park ranger who arrived on the scene shortly after.
Dr. Margaret Bangs, a local private-practice doctor, said the two women fleeing the area warned her not to go up because of problems with the goat.
“I was in the saddle just before you get to the other hill on the Switchback Trail,” Bangs said.
Goat following hiker
‘”I looked up, and you could see him [Boardman] with two walking sticks and that goat following, just breathing down his neck.”
She tried to make a cell phone call but did not have service.
“I was too much behind the mountain to get service, so I left to do the only thing I could think of to help: I went to go find a ranger,” Bangs said.
By the time she got to an area with a ranger, someone with a cell phone had already phoned in.
Mike Dawson of Port Townsend was on a day hike in the area when he came upon attempted rescue efforts about an hour after Boardman was injured.
“The rescue workers were trying to get in there, but the goat wouldn’t leave,” he said.
“Eventually, they got a group of people together to scare him away, but he was still guarding the area an hour later.”
He watched as a Coast Guard helicopter hoisted Boardman and attempted to resuscitate him.
Boardman was pronounced dead at Olympic Medical Center that afternoon.
In 2008, park officials warned of an aggressive goat in the Klahhane-Hurricane Ridge-Switchback Trail area.
Both park visitors and staff had reported a billy goat on the trail that had approached hikers, followed them and refused to back down, Maynes had said then.
On Sunday, she said it was unknown if only one goat or several were the subject of the reports.
And she didn’t know if the billy goat that killed Boardman was the same goat that had intimidated other hikers for at least two years.
“We have had specific reports that we can specifically link to one individual goat,” Maynes said.
“We also have reports of goats not moving off the trail or following people that are impossible to link to a particular goat.”
Various facts are shared about the recent history of goats in Olympic National Park, and then the article continues with more details about nearby other aggressive animals:
In July, park officials issued a written statement warning visitors to stay at least 100 feet away from the Roosevelt elk in the Hoh Rain Forest area of the park because of some aggressive behavior.
Visitors are also routinely warned not to feed animals in the park as that can contribute to them becoming “habituated” or comfortable with humans.
When elk become habituated, they can become aggressive, the statement said.
Credit: Paige Dickerson of the Peninsula Daily News
Tip of the hat to InvisibleInk.
About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct).
Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015.
Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.
1) don’t get too close
2) if they act threatened or threatening (herbivores that is) don’t look directly at them, which is interpreted as predator behavior. Look towards the ground and slowly angle off, as if another herbivore not remotely interested in the threatened animal.
3) Someone might know better than I, if so, please speak up.
Very very sad story. I carry a $5 air-horn on me whenever hiking. It scares just about any animal away when directed at them and poses no threat to myself (unlike pepper spray) if used incorrectly.
Unfortunate end, but hardly a tragedy. Wild animal kills old man who wanders into its territory… and then gets shot by other men as result.
Aeschylus shouldn’t be too worried.
“Hardly a tragedy”?? Maybe if it was your loved one (or your goat) it would be tragic.
Are people, especially hikers, in the North America wilderness unaware that the rut (breeding season) for North American Wild goats, sheep, deer and bison occurs during the Autumn (Oct-Nov)?! While in a state of rut the males of these species act far more differently than any other time of the year. Males will become extremely aggressive to anything else that moves in their visual range, except the females of their species. The males will fight anything in their effort to secure the right to breed with females.
Pepper spray in the face of a male focused on the hiker might have provided time for him to escape but an air horn would likely not have an impact on any male goat/deer/bison in rut unless blown right in their ear, if you want to get that close!
Just my view, Born and bred in England. A couple of decades ago I was hitch hiking through Alaska with a bit of mountaineering thrown in and a lot of drinking 🙂
I spent many days out in the wilderness but took a little time to try and understand what wildlife I would encounter, that’s the same little research I did through the many countries I have travelled round across the globe.
I am no expert on animal behaviour but have faced black bears in Alaska, sharks in Australia, scorpians in Israel, crocodiles in Egypt … And worst of all , Man across the globe and am still here to tell the tale.
My condolences go out to his family but any animal is capable of attacking another given certain situations … I now work in Brighton, England and believe me I’ve had more close calls working at night here than in any other wilderness.
My condolences to the family as well!