Hunter shoots woman's husky in Alberta after mistaking it for wolf

If you mistake a black lab for a black bear, you should not be hunting black bear. The same is true for mistaking the husky in the picture for a wolf. I fully support hunting, but every incident like this turns more people against hunting, and we are already losing hunting opportunity as a result. If you are not 100% sure of your target, do not pull the trigger.

As I've said to many: better to regret the shot not taken than to regret the shot taken. Once you pull the trigger you are 100% responsible for any consequences.

And as others have said, from the story, the dog was not running at large or harassing wildlife. From the information available, it seems the guy in question had a lapse in judgement; people, voices, dogs with bells, reflective collar and a very short distance. Unfortunately for him, I think he is liable for whatever the total cost of veterinary treatment proves to be.
 
RCMP said no charges have been laid, but they're asking anyone with information to contact them.

"The male has co-operated with the investigation."

"We were three women walking single file..."

Information about what? Does anybody else read these articles the way I do? What more could they learn from someone that wasn't there? The bulb seems on but using a dimmer switch.
 
I had a similar encounter years ago in the NT. I was spring bear hunting in a wooded area about an hour out of town. A lady was walking her black lab, no leash, no trails, I was sure it was a bear, I held for a clear shot. Out comes the lady and her dog, up goes the rifle, tradgedy was averted. A reflective vest for poochie is a cheep safety measure when in the woods with your dog.

And one should double or even triple check their target and what is beyond.

The Hunter is just as responsible dare I suggest even more responsible than a errant pet owner .

One must Be 100 % sure of ones target and beyond.

The guy who was shot not once but twice or three times( hit once for sure ) while sitting on his Red Honda ATV while Moose hunting in Northern BC a few years back was minding his own business and the idiot doing the shooting claimed he thought the guy upon the Red ATV was a Moose.

There is no justification for slopping hunting .

Rob
 
Some people do really dumb things,I was target shooting with my boys on a dead end FS road and a car drove up,past us us and around my targets set up in the road and parked.The women wearing tan coloured coats got out, and proceeded to berate us for 'illegal' shooting....I was absolutely dumbfounded that anybody could be that stupid, first to drive past people shooting ( we had a portable shooting bench set up) and then on down the road past our very obvious targets ...I politely(?) informed them we were perfectly legal,shooting in a safe place ( on a dead end FS road with a clay bank as a backstop in a clear cut so we had clear vision) I also politely(?) told them it was hunting season and they were out walking wearing coats that were about the same colour as a deer ...not smart...we just packed up and left....you can't fix stupid

Generally I see people out hiking or berry picking wearing some blaze orange or red which is just common sense in the fall
 
Had my dog shot when I was about 12. It was running free. On private land. In the dark. In the headlights of the truck that was a couple hundred yards behind him. Me and Jake used to be deadly on squirrels. He'd find them and I'd shoot them. Always came home with pockets full.

If this story is true this guy is a retard. The woman did nothing wrong
 
Had my dog shot when I was about 12. It was running free. On private land. In the dark. In the headlights of the truck that was a couple hundred yards behind him. Me and Jake used to be deadly on squirrels. He'd find them and I'd shoot them. Always came home with pockets full.

If this story is true this guy is a retard. The woman did nothing wrong

Why did someone shoot your squirrel dog in the dark?

What did you do with those pockets full of squirrels? :)
 
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Hunter shoots woman's husky in Alberta after mistaking it for wolf

The Canadian Press
Published Wednesday, January 17, 2018 9:03PM EST

HINTON, Alta. -- A western Alberta woman is urging hunters and hikers to be more aware of their surroundings after her pet husky was mistaken for a wolf and shot in the legs.

Bethany Dyck was walking with two friends on Saturday along a wooded trail near Hinton, Alta., that runs parallel to an old road. The group was on its way back, when her pooch, Meka, was playing in the forest with another dog.

"We were three women walking single file, talking pretty loudly," Dyck said Wednesday. "The other dog that was with us had bells on and Meka was wearing a bright orange collar."

They heard a gunshot and ran 30 metres through the bush toward the road, where they found Meka. Blood was seeping into the snow and the animal was screaming.

"It's the worst sound I can imagine hearing coming from my pet," Dyck recalled.

A hunter was in a clearing another 30 metres from where Meka was lying.

Hinton RCMP said in a news release that they were called to a rural area on Saturday where a husky had been shot.

"The adult male who had fired the shot was lawfully hunting in the area at the time and mistook the dog for a wolf," the RCMP said. "The male has co-operated with the investigation."

RCMP said no charges have been laid, but they're asking anyone with information to contact them.

Dyck said one of her friends fashioned a tourniquet out of a sock to put on Meka's leg and they set off for the vet. Throughout the 20-minute drive, Dyck said she was watching Meka's chest rise and fall.

"She was very lucid the whole time. Her pupils never dilated. She was so clear and aware," Dyck said.

The bullet went through Meka's front right leg, hit bone, and then passed through her rear left leg.

She said the hunter stuck around and accompanied Dyck to the vet, but he told her he could only contribute $1,000 toward the bill.

Vet bills so far have totalled $4,000, Dyck said. If Meka needs surgery, which will be determined in another week or two, it could be another $4,000.

A GoFundMe page has been set up to help ease some of the financial burden.

Dyck said she hopes her dog will be back to her usual self before too long.

"Meka's happiest when she's in the woods off leash going for a run. It's so obvious when she's running how happy she is," she said.

"She has endless amounts of energy, especially when it's -30 C. She loves people. She's not a very affectionate dog, but she's a really great sidekick to do any adventures."

There was a similar case of mistaken identity near Whistler, B.C., in September. But that time, a four-year-old therapy dog that resembled a wolf died of its injuries after it was shot by a hunter.

Dyck said she hopes people will learn from her story.

"Just because you don't hear or see them, you have to understand that there's other people in the woods," she said.

"So to assume that you're by yourself on a Saturday afternoon, it's a beautiful day outside, that there's not going to be people walking their dogs, that's wrong."


She said she has nothing against hunting in general.

"But I'm not OK with them shooting my dog."

-- By Lauren Krugel in Calgary

Maybe she should take her own advice. Assume there could be hunters in the area and keep her dog on a leash
 
Would it be a good idea, and make hunters look a little better, to pool some money together and donate it towards her vet bills? At least show some support and say that, at least not all, hunters are "heartless" "rednecks"? I see she had a gofundme, but I think it would be a better show of compassion/publicity to give something to her directly from hunters.

100 percent. Appears that the donations are up to 5700 dollars already. Was nice to see she wasn't out bashing hunters on the news, we could probably extend her the same courtesy.
 
If you mistake a black lab for a black bear, you should not be hunting black bear. The same is true for mistaking the husky in the picture for a wolf. I fully support hunting, but every incident like this turns more people against hunting, and we are already losing hunting opportunity as a result. If you are not 100% sure of your target, do not pull the trigger.

In case my post was a little confusing...

I am against hunters not being 100% certain what it is before they are shooting. I mean its not a life or death situation. If unsure, just move on and enjoy the walk!

I am scared at some people's attitudes in this thread which is why my dog wears a vest in the woods. And even then who knows if that'll be enough!
 
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Hunter shoots woman's husky in Alberta after mistaking it for wolf

The Canadian Press
Published Wednesday, January 17, 2018 9:03PM EST

HINTON, Alta. -- A western Alberta woman is urging hunters and hikers to be more aware of their surroundings after her pet husky was mistaken for a wolf and shot in the legs.

Bethany Dyck was walking with two friends on Saturday along a wooded trail near Hinton, Alta., that runs parallel to an old road. The group was on its way back, when her pooch, Meka, was playing in the forest with another dog.

"We were three women walking single file, talking pretty loudly," Dyck said Wednesday. "The other dog that was with us had bells on and Meka was wearing a bright orange collar."

They heard a gunshot and ran 30 metres through the bush toward the road, where they found Meka. Blood was seeping into the snow and the animal was screaming.

"It's the worst sound I can imagine hearing coming from my pet," Dyck recalled.

A hunter was in a clearing another 30 metres from where Meka was lying.

Hinton RCMP said in a news release that they were called to a rural area on Saturday where a husky had been shot.

"The adult male who had fired the shot was lawfully hunting in the area at the time and mistook the dog for a wolf," the RCMP said. "The male has co-operated with the investigation."

RCMP said no charges have been laid, but they're asking anyone with information to contact them.

Dyck said one of her friends fashioned a tourniquet out of a sock to put on Meka's leg and they set off for the vet. Throughout the 20-minute drive, Dyck said she was watching Meka's chest rise and fall.

"She was very lucid the whole time. Her pupils never dilated. She was so clear and aware," Dyck said.

The bullet went through Meka's front right leg, hit bone, and then passed through her rear left leg.

She said the hunter stuck around and accompanied Dyck to the vet, but he told her he could only contribute $1,000 toward the bill.

Vet bills so far have totalled $4,000, Dyck said. If Meka needs surgery, which will be determined in another week or two, it could be another $4,000.

A GoFundMe page has been set up to help ease some of the financial burden.

Dyck said she hopes her dog will be back to her usual self before too long.

"Meka's happiest when she's in the woods off leash going for a run. It's so obvious when she's running how happy she is," she said.

"She has endless amounts of energy, especially when it's -30 C. She loves people. She's not a very affectionate dog, but she's a really great sidekick to do any adventures."

There was a similar case of mistaken identity near Whistler, B.C., in September. But that time, a four-year-old therapy dog that resembled a wolf died of its injuries after it was shot by a hunter.

Dyck said she hopes people will learn from her story.

"Just because you don't hear or see them, you have to understand that there's other people in the woods," she said.

"So to assume that you're by yourself on a Saturday afternoon, it's a beautiful day outside, that there's not going to be people walking their dogs, that's wrong."

She said she has nothing against hunting in general.

"But I'm not OK with them shooting my dog."

-- By Lauren Krugel in Calgary

that hunter is a #### shot if at 30m he hit a leg
 
i think its a good idea for people to put some kind of a reflective color vest on there dogs when out walking with them in the woods .
 
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