So, many years ago when I was into hunting, I was in a tree stand and it was getting dark. Was just about to unload and climb down when I looked up and saw a buck grazing in front of a pond about 70-80 yards in front of me. I was in the middle of a big field and out of the corner of my eye, I saw my buddy shine his flashlight as he was headed my way. The buck saw it too and raised his head. When he did, I dropped him. My friend thought I was shooting at him and started hollering at me. I hollered back that I had just dropped a buck about 100 yards ahead of him and he wasn't dead yet. So, my buddy hauled ass toward the animal and decided to live out a Tarzan fantasy and finish the kill with his knife. He jumps on the downed deer and as soon as he did, the buck flipped his dumb ass up in the air. I came real close to falling off my perch because of uncontrollable laughter. Maybe I shouldn't have laughed....... (foxynewz)
A hunter in
Arkansas died after a deer he shot turned the tables — and reportedly attacked him.
Thomas Alexander, 66, is believed to have been killed
as he was hunting in
Yellville, an area roughly 102 miles east of
Fayetteville, on Tuesday at about 6:30 p.m., officials said.
Alexander shot the buck using a muzzleloader, Keith Stephens, a spokesperson for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, told Fox News.
"He apparently went over to the buck and it got up and attacked him," Stephens said.
A deer who had been shot by Thomas Alexander on Tuesday night apparently got up and attacked him, leading to the hunter's death. (iStock)
The 66-year-old was able to call his wife, and he was transported to the hospital after 8 p.m. He was going to be air-lifted to the hospital, but Alexander stopped breathing on the way to the helicopter, so he was driven there in an ambulance.
Alexander was pronounced dead at Baxter Regional Medical Center in Mountain Home, Stephens said. It wasn't clear whether Alexander died from the deer attack, or due to other medical problems, like a heart attack, but hospital officials said he did have puncture wounds when he was admitted. The spokesperson said he doesn't believe an autopsy will be conducted to find out how the hunter died.
Stephens
told KY3 that about four years ago there was a similar incident, during which "somebody was
struck by a buck's antlers" — but survived.
He said hunters should make sure to wait 30 minutes after shooting a deer before approaching it, as "it may not be dead." Stephens said Alexander "may have done that, [but] we just don’t know."