Friends rescue Shaktoolik man after severe mauling by grizzly

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From Anchorage Daily News

Friends rescue Shaktoolik man after severe mauling by grizzly
Young companions hailed as heroes

By ALEX deMARBAN
ademarban@adn.com
Published: August 8, 2007
Last Modified: August 8, 2007 at 10:05 AM

A Western Alaska man is recovering at an Anchorage hospital after a horrific bear mauling, thanks to quick action by two hunting partners who may have saved his life -- and his legs.

The grizzly bear attacked Sean Evan, 32, last Tuesday while Evan was on a moose hunting trip with two others up the Shaktoolik River.

Details about the attack are sketchy. The hunters, all from the village of Shaktoolik, east of Nome, wouldn't talk about what happened.

But villagers described a remarkable rescue and an emotional scene at the local clinic as the health aide -- Evan's fiancee, Lydia Jackson -- cared for Evan's shattered legs and stabilized him for an emergency flight out.

Evan's hunting partners and close friends, Michael Rock, 23, and A.J. Nakarak, 17, were extremely shaken by the mauling and cried as they described what happened, said Mayor Harvey Sookiayak.

Sookiayak and others wouldn't discuss details of the attack, either, referring questions to the three hunters.

Rock, reached in Shaktoolik , said he and his brother, Nakarak, had nothing to say. Asked why, he replied, "It's embarrassing. We consider ourselves very good hunters and this thing (being attacked) is frowned upon by me and my hunting crew."

According to villagers:

The three hunters had taken a boat a couple of hours upriver from the village and had walked another two miles when Evan was attacked. His companions shot the bear several times, killing it.

With their friend badly injured, they made a leg tourniquet with a belt strap from rain pants and fashioned a splint from branches to keep his legs together below the knees. They hauled Evan back to the boat and sped back to the village. They elevated his knees and kept him warm.

Sookiayak, who helped dress the wounds at the clinic, said Evan's lower legs were badly mangled, possibly crushed by the bear's jaws.

Both legs had large tears in the flesh below the knee, especially the left leg. After a splint was removed from the left leg, only muscle seemed to hold the leg together, he said.

"It was a huge gash, something like I've never seen before," Sookiayak said.

The attack shook the tight-knit village of 200, he said. "There's been quite a bit of concern. We're hoping and praying he'll pull completely through with no damage."

News of the tragedy spread through the community over VHF radios -- initial reports said Evan had been accidentally shot -- and villagers flocked to the clinic to offer support, said city clerk Rita Auliye.

"They were in shock. First time we ever had a bear attack around here," she said.

Unusually high numbers of bears have been spotted in the area this summer, said Sookiayak and Sgt. Matthew Dobson, head of state wildlife enforcement for the region. People have been worried because berry pickers are seeing them in groups, instead of alone.

One reason for all the bears could be that there are more dead walrus on the coastline than usual, Dobson said. It's unclear why, he said. Also, there was no commercial herring season for the first time in many years in Norton Sound, and more herring and roe might be washing ashore, he said.

Family members visiting Evan at the Alaska Native Medical Center in Anchorage say he's doing better than expected, Auliye said. Doctors report he might walk with both legs again.

Auliye said the village sees Rock and Nakarak as heroes for saving Evan's life and legs by stopping the bleeding and getting him to the village quickly.

"The paramedics said he could have bled to death before they got to the clinic," she said. "We are pretty proud of those boys."
 
this thread is a prime example,as to why every one should take a first aid course..
just by having a bit of common knowledge,this guys hunting partners saved his life
 
At tourniquet is a strong indication that someone hasn't taken a first aid course.

why would you say that? its tought in wilderness first aid as a last resort method, and you need to understand were these boys were playing, vancouver general is more than a hop skip and jump away ;)

common sence saved there buddies life and Ill bet none of them ever read a CGN how to deal with ha charging bear thread :D:D
 
I disagree with MHUNT too. He did not see the wound to come to that conclusion. Tourniquet was probably the only contraption they could realistically come up with under the circumstances, and the only thing they had was a strap from the pants. What were they supposed to do with blood pouring out of the legs? I had a FA course and it says if blood is pouring - install tourniquet and loosen every 10 minutes, apply pressure to the wound and bandage. What if you have no bandage in the boonies?
 
A tournequet is a terrible idea...if you have an option. Out in the sticks, they had no options, and were more concerned with saving the mans life than saving what was left of his legs. They did the best they could with what they had at hand...that's survival.
I hope my hunting buddies would be as competent as these fellas were.
 
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