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kilometers
10-02-2016, 05:25 PM
Pretty messy after math. Will try to find a non Facebook video of it

https://www.facebook.com/todd.orr/posts/10210413769369912 (https://www.facebook.com/todd.orr/posts/10210413769369912)

scoutlt1
10-02-2016, 05:31 PM
http://www.ktvq.com/story/33299198/montana-man-documents-moments-after-grizzly-bear-attack

Murder
10-02-2016, 05:35 PM
Thanks for sharing. I saw this on Facebook and couldn't figure out how to get it on hbc. Poor, tough sob. Peppers are for cooking I guess. No substiture fir hot lead

Mike

Brambles
10-02-2016, 06:13 PM
The guys a soldier, he took a good beating....I wish him a speedy recovery

Omenator
10-02-2016, 06:23 PM
Ouch!
I wonder why the sow came back for round two? Not like she didn't know he was there as bears senses are lots better than ours.

Spy
10-02-2016, 06:32 PM
Tough ****er wow, hope he makes a full recovery. It's videos like this that gets us one step closer to being able to carry a hand gun in Grizz country.

Rattler
10-02-2016, 06:48 PM
Wow is he ever lucky to be alive. It is scary how fast Gbears can run! Amazed he filmed himself, pretty certain I wouldn't have...tough sob no doubt.
Wonder what he was packing for a pistol?

Hope his recovery goes well.

Cyrus
10-02-2016, 06:59 PM
crazy! lucky to survive

Arctic Lake
10-02-2016, 08:47 PM
WOW ! Glad he's alive ! Geezz he took a real beating, hope he has a speedy recovery !
Arctic Lake

Stone Sheep Steve
10-02-2016, 10:19 PM
ouch. That's gonna leave a mark.:icon_frow

REMINGTON JIM
10-02-2016, 10:28 PM
Tough ****er wow, hope he makes a full recovery. It's videos like this that gets us one step closer to being able to carry a hand gun in Grizz country.

YUP ! and YUPPERS ! RJ

BigSkogButt
10-02-2016, 10:31 PM
Wow is he ever lucky to be alive. It is scary how fast Gbears can run! Amazed he filmed himself, pretty certain I wouldn't have...tough sob no doubt.
Wonder what he was packing for a pistol?

Hope his recovery goes well.
He was packing a pistol. He wrote up the account on his FB page. According to him, he was separated from it after the second attack.

Backwoods
10-02-2016, 10:34 PM
Seen this in rokslide tonight, crazy how they can come in from
that distance and a guy still has to take a shit kicking not only once but they came back and attacked him a second time!!! He is a tough SOB

russm86
10-03-2016, 07:56 AM
He was packing a pistol. He wrote up the account on his FB page. According to him, he was separated from it after the second attack.

His mistake, it seems, was going for the pepper spray the first time around instead of the pistol...

emerson
10-03-2016, 10:56 AM
Yes, if it doesn't work no time for a second tool. My comfort distance is about 15yds and aggressive. A black bear I'll shoot at 20 if no Cubs and doesn't move on. Just have to cut a tag. A Grizz maybe 15. It's sad I am willing to risk my life to wait longer so less likely to be charged by a CO...

Island Idiots
10-03-2016, 11:04 AM
I was just out cruising on my ATV the other day. I cam around a corner and a sow and cub were running the other way. Thankfully. I didn't think anything of it. This was on a spur road. After reading his story, it makes you think. I had spray handy, but that's not real effective on a charging bear it seems. Now I could have had my double 12 Ga in the rest in front of me. That would make me feel a little better.

I think I might just make that a habit. Faster to load than my rifle and at close range with slugs, pretty effective.

Steve W
10-03-2016, 11:18 AM
From Orr's FB page:

Grizzly 10/1/16
Hello everyone.
Thought I should share yesterday morning's Grizzly incident.
I took an early morning hike in the Madison valley to scout for elk. Knowing that bears are common throughout southwest Montana, I hollered out "hey bear" about every 30 seconds so as to not surprise any bears along the trail.
About three miles in, I stepped out into an open meadow and hollered again. A few more steps and I spotted a sow Grizzly bear with cubs on the trail at the upper end of the meadow. The sow saw me right away and they ran a short distance up the trail. But suddenly she turned and charged straight my way. I yelled a number of times so she knew I was human and would hopefully turn back. No such luck. Within a couple seconds, she was nearly on me. I gave her a full charge of bear spray at about 25 feet. Her momentum carried her right through the orange mist and on me.
I went to my face in the dirt and wrapped my arms around the back of my neck for protection. She was on top of me biting my arms, shoulders and backpack. The force of each bite was like a sledge hammer with teeth. She would stop for a few seconds and then bite again. Over and over. After a couple minutes, but what seemed an eternity, she disappeared.
Stunned, I carefully picked myself up. I was alive and able to walk so I headed back down the trail towards the truck 3 miles below. As I half hiked and jogged down the trail, I glanced at my injuries. I had numerous bleeding puncture wounds on my arms and shoulder but I knew I would survive and thanked god for getting me through this. I hoped the bleeding wasn't too significant. I really didn't want to stop to dress the wounds. I wanted to keep moving and put distance between us.
About five or ten minutes down the trail, I heard a sound and turned to find the Griz bearing down at 30 feet. She either followed me back down the trail or cut through the trees and randomly came out on the trail right behind me. Whatever the case, she was instantly on me again. I couldn't believe this was happening a second time! Why me? I was so lucky the first attack, but now I questioned if I would survive the second.
Again I protected the back of my neck with my arms, and kept tight against the ground to protect my face and eyes. She slammed down on top of me and bit my shoulder and arms again. One bite on my forearm went through to the bone and I heard a crunch. My hand instantly went numb and wrist and fingers were limp and unusable. The sudden pain made me flinch and gasp for breath. The sound triggered a frenzy of bites to my shoulder and upper back. I knew I couldn't move or make a sound again so I huddled motionless. Another couple bites to my head and a gash opened above my ear, nearly scalping me. The blood gushed over my face and into my eyes. I didn't move. I thought this was the end. She would eventually hit an artery in my neck and I would bleed out in the trail... But I knew that moving would trigger more bites so a laid motionless hoping it would end.
She suddenly stopped and just stood on top of me. I will never forgot that brief moment. Dead silence except for the sound of her heavy breathing and sniffing. I could feel and her breath on the back of my neck, just inches away. I could feel her front claws digging into my lower back below my backpack where she stood. I could smell the terrible pungent odor she emitted. For thirty seconds she stood there crushing me. My chest was smashed into the ground and forehead in the dirt. When would the next onslaught of biting began. I didn't move.
And then she was gone.
I tried to peek out without moving but my eyes were full of blood and I couldn't see. I thought that if she came back a third time I would be dead, so I had to do something. Staying in position on the ground, I slowly reached under my chest to grab at the pistol I was unable to get to earlier. I felt I needed something to save my life. The pistol wasn't there. I groped around again but nothing. I wiped the blood from one eye and looked around.
No bear.
The pistol and holster were lying five feet to my left. The bear's ferocious bites and pulling had ripped the straps from the pack and the holster attached to it. Now trashed, that backpack may have helped prevent many more serious bites on my back and spine.
I picked everything up and moved down the trail again. I couldn't believe I had survived two attacks. Double lucky!
Blood was still dripping off my head and both elbows and my shirt was soaked to the waist and into my pants. But a quick assessment told me I could make it another 45 minutes to the truck without losing too much blood.
I continued the jog just wanting to put more distance between that sow and I.
At the trailhead was one other vehicle. I really hoped that person didn't run into the same bear.
I snapped a couple quick photos and a video of my wounds, laid some jackets over the truck seat and headed for town. I stopped a rancher along the way and asked him to make a call to the hospital. When I got into cell service, I made a quick call to my girlfriend to ask how her morning was going, before freaking her out and asking her to bring me a change of clean clothes to the hospital.
Another call to 911 and I gave the operator a quick run down of my injuries and asked her to call the hospital and give them a heads up that I was ten minutes out.
Moments later I was met at the front door by the doctor, nurse and an officer. I had to ask the officer to open the door, put my truck in park, and unbuckle my seat belt. My left arm was useless. He was impressed I had taken the effort to buckle.
Once inside, the x-rays revealed only a chip out of the ulna bone in my forearm. Following was eight hours of stitching to put me back together. Most were arm and shoulder punctures and tears. A 5" gash along the side of my head will leave a nasty scar, but I'm hoping my balding doesn't come on too quickly and leave that one exposed. :)
And finally, this morning, numerous deep bruises and scrapes are showing up from the bites that didn't quite break the skin. Dark bruising in the shape of claws, line across my lower back and butt where the bear stood on me. Also a few more chest bruises and facial abrasions from being smashed and slammed into the ground.
Not my best day, but I'm alive.
So thankful I'm here to share with all of you. :)
In a couple weeks I will have to clean out the truck a little better. My girlfriend says it looks like I had gutted an elk in the drivers seat.
Todd Orr. Skyblade Knives.

emerson
10-03-2016, 12:23 PM
Thanks for posting for us non facebook types.

skibum
10-03-2016, 01:56 PM
"Dead silence except for the sound of her heavy breathing and sniffing."

To me, this would be worst horror movie ever.

swampthing
10-03-2016, 06:52 PM
He is pretty calm for being just chewed up by a bear!! Tough is right.

PKernohan
10-03-2016, 07:51 PM
Wow, just wow.

The relief he must have felt to get away with his life after the first attack, and then the fear that must have come over him as she was coming back down the trail towards him for the second attack.

Talk about a rollercoaster of emotions.

BChunter
10-03-2016, 08:19 PM
Glad you pulled through Todd. Sow's with cubs, its understandable but scary shit! Everyone should be looking at your Skyblade knives! Could be a lucky knife made by you! I wish you a full recovery, you took a lot!

russm
10-03-2016, 08:22 PM
Would've sucked to pass out and crash while driving to the hospital, then the headline would be "man survives grizzly attack, dies in car wreck while driving to hospital."

I dont think bear spray would be my first choice with a grizzly.

604ksmith
10-03-2016, 08:33 PM
Unforgettable story, crazy to hear he made it out alive.

I'm a fan of bear spray due to my use of it, but maybe sometimes the bear just won't quit until you "make" them.

Drillbit
10-04-2016, 12:58 AM
Reminds me of the Revenant bear attack scene.....

I bet that's Tom Orr's kids, the guy off the Mountain Man show on history channel