Who you gonna call?

Mountain lions are predators whose only natural enemy has traditionally been man.

Or in this case, woman:

Jim and Nell Hamm, who will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary next month, were hiking in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park when the lion pounced.

"He didn't scream. It was a different, horrible plea for help, and I turned around, and by then the cat had wrestled Jim to the ground," Nell Hamm said in an interview from the hospital where her husband was recovering from a torn scalp, puncture wounds and other injuries.

After the attack, game wardens closed the park about 320 miles north of San Francisco and released hounds to track the lion. They later shot and killed a pair of lions found near the trail where the attack happened.

The carcasses were flown to a state forensics lab to determine if either animal mauled the man.

Although the Hamms are experienced hikers, neither had seen a mountain lion before Jim Hamm was mauled, his wife said. Nell Hamm said she grabbed a four-inch-wide log and beat the animal with it, but it would not release its hold on her husband's head.

"Jim was talking to me all through this, and he said, 'I've got a pen in my pocket and get the pen and jab him in the eye,'" she said. "So I got the pen and tried to put it in his eye, but it didn't want to go in as easy as I thought it would."

When the pen bent and became useless, Nell Hamm went back to using the log. The lion eventually let go and, with blood on its snout, stood staring at the woman. She screamed and waved the log until the animal walked away.

"She saved his life, there is no doubt about it," said Steve Martarano, a spokesman for the Department of Fish and Game.

Nell Hamm, 65, said she was scared to leave her dazed, bleeding husband alone, so the couple walked a quarter-mile to a trail head, where she gathered branches to protect them if more lions came around. They waited until a ranger came by and summoned help.

"My concern was to get Jim out of there," she said. "I told him, 'Get up, get up, walk,' and he did."

He'll live, thanks to this ballsy woman.

Meanwhile, in California (where police are vilified for killing mountain lions that threaten children), another mountain lion has been spotted.

In beautiful Beverly Hills, no less!

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- Police searching for a mountain lion in Beverly Hills came up empty-handed Saturday, authorities said.

A mountain lion sighting was reported in the 1000 block of Tower Road at about 11 p.m. on Friday, police said.

After about an hour, the search was called off.

Who could blame them? If they found the mountain lion and shot it, the activists would be outraged, and complaints would be lodged against the police.

I say, if people can't rely on the cops to shoot mountain lions in Beverly Hills, there's only one solution.

Bring back the Clampetts!

clampetts.jpg

posted by Eric on 01.27.07 at 03:33 PM





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Comments

If you go into the mountains, where mountain lions live, and are not prepared for it, then you deserve what you get. If you build your house deep in the woods, in bear country, you can't complain when bears start rummaging through your garbage. If you go into shark infested waters and are bitten by a shark, guess who's fault it is.

If you don't want your children to be attacked mountain lions, don't send them into the mountains.

Jake   ·  January 27, 2007 07:51 PM

David Baron's book about feline carnivores in Boulder CO, The Beast in the Garden describes the same process: mountains lions add human flesh to their menu, and liberals apologize for our civilization's existence and/or deny that there is really any threat out there at all.....

Caius Marcius   ·  January 27, 2007 08:31 PM

The best way to be prepared for any attack -- whether by man or animal -- is to be armed.

Eric Scheie   ·  January 27, 2007 11:04 PM

Tower Road??? AMAZING! That's in one of the canyons between the San Fernando valley and the Westside.

It is an EXTREMELY wealthy area. Folks like Elton John and Lucille Ball used to live on Tower.

It isn't like this area is unpopulated. There is tons of traffic and noise to make a lion skittish. They have a lot of problems with cayotes, racoons and the like, but I've never heard of a lion in those parts.

Shoot the damn thing. It's a LION. Adding the word "mountain" in front of it doesn't make it any less a LION!

Mrs. du Toit   ·  January 28, 2007 01:26 AM


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