Be Very Cautious of Animals Acting Strangley

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Wednesday, November 05, 2008

A Chino Valley woman must undergo a series of rabies shots after battling a sick fox that bit her twice.

Thirty-year-old Michelle Felicepta said she was jogging late Monday afternoon on her favorite trail at the base of Granite Mountain when she saw the fox coming down onto the trail ahead of her. She stopped as the 10- to 15-pound animal turned and faced her.

"I knew something was wrong when its eyes locked in on me," Felicepta said Wednesday during a telephone interview.



As she started backing away, the fox lunged at her and bit her foot. Then it went for her knee.

As it did, the woman instinctively grabbed it by the neck, trying to pull it away.

"As soon as I grabbed its neck, it started thrashing and grabbed my left arm," Felicepta continued.

The fox bit down hard, drawing blood.

"The teeth were in real deep," Felicepta recalled.

She started looking around for a stick to pry its mouth open, but couldn't find one.

"I was choking him with my right hand and each time I (loosened) up my grip a little, he got a little bit of air and he'd start thrashing around and kind of screaming."

Finally, believing the fox was rabid and knowing authorities would need to test it to make sure, she decided to run back to her car - parked about a mile and a half away - with the fox's mouth still clamped on her arm, her right hand gripped tightly around its throat.

"Thank god for adrenaline," Felicepta said.

After reaching her car and popping open the trunk, she managed to pry the fox's mouth open.

"I'd been choking that thing the whole time," Felicepta said, laughing at her own ferocity.

She yanked off her sweatshirt, wrapped it around the fox and flung the animal into her trunk "as hard as I could," she added.

Next, she hopped into her car and drove herself to Yavapai Regional Medical Center. On the way there, she finally got scared.

"That's when it kind of sunk in," Felicepta said.

At the hospital, the fox also bit a Yavapai County Animal Control Officer as the officer was getting the animal out of the trunk, said Dwight D'Evelyn, spokesman for the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office.

On Tuesday, the Arizona State Health Laboratory in Phoenix tested the fox and confirmed it had rabies.

Felicepta will get five rabies shots over the next few weeks. The animal control officer will get only two or three because he had already received a pre-exposure rabies vaccination, D'Evelyn said.

Arizona's public health veterinarian, Elisabeth Lawaczeck, said Felicepta did the best she could under difficult circumstances.

"It's kind of just bad luck when you're on a trail and get attacked," Lawaczeck said.

Last year Yavapai County had six confirmed cases of rabies in wild animals. So far this year it has recorded 10.

That's not unusual, Lawaczeck said.

"Rabies is a cyclical disease because it wipes out the population that has it," she explained.

For more information about rabies, call the Arizona Department of Health Services at 602-364-4562.

Contact the reporter at tshultz@prescottaz.com

 
Thanks for the heads up. We often forget that they are wild and just might be dangerous. Actually I hope most of us here don't forget but these remind me to teach the kids.
 
Not trying to hijack this thread but this was in the news as well -

SPARTANBURG, S.C. — Evening youth programs at a South Carolina church were interrupted when a fox burst in and attacked three people.

The bite victims are now waiting to see whether they'll need to be treated for rabies after the Wednesday night incident.

The Herald-Journal of Spartanburg reported Friday that a woman opened the door of the family life center at Liberty Baptist Church in Inman to lead youth group members to the main building when the fox pounced.

The animal jumped on the skirt of Pastor David Duncan's 20-year-old daughter, Alicia Duncan, and its teeth scratched her legs, he said. Two other people were bitten.

Several people tried to scare the fox outside and had to use metal chairs to hit it.

Officials say the animal was hurt when officers arrived and it died shortly thereafter.

The Department of Health and Environmental Control was conducting tests to determine if it was rabid.
 
A friend of mines wife and son had to get those shots after a run in with a gray squirrell that attacked both of them. It even persued the boy into the house then attacked the woman when she tried to scare it out of the house.

Now he can brag to everyone he knows his wife is ok cause she's had her shots.
 
Man, boy bitten by rabid fox

Animal 12th with rabies in Charleston County this year
By Jill Coley (Contact)
The Post and Courier
Thursday, November 6, 2008



MOUNT PLEASANT — On Monday morning, Jeff and Christina Davis sat at the breakfast table in their Dunes West home. Through the window, they saw their 9-year-old neighbor Brody Padoll walking to the bus stop.
Behind him, a little red fox stalked.
The incident, full of screaming and excitement, ended with the fox biting Brody and Jeff Davis before being trapped in the Davis' computer room.
Test results confirmed Wednesday that the fox was rabid, health officials said, making it the 12th rabid animal in Charleston County in 2008. Last year, 26 rabid animals were confirmed in the county and 162 statewide.
Previous Stories

Man being treated after rabies risk, published 08/13/08
West Ashley woman being treated against rabies, published 01/26/08

Both bite victims will receive a regimen of preventive shots. Once the rabies virus reaches the brain, the disease is fatal to humans and animals.
When the fox started chasing Brody, Davis ran outside to help, he said. He hollered for Brody to run up the stairs and into their raised house. As Brody scrambled up the steps, the fox bit him on his calf.
About 20 minutes later, Davis went out on the balcony to look for the fox, fearing the animal might be rabid and would needed to be tested.
"This little sucker comes up and starts gnawing and snapping," he said.
"We slammed the door on the fox, but he wiggled his way inside," Christina Davis said.
Jeff Davis tried to kick the fox back outside and got bitten, he said.
"I got angry and picked it up and threw it in the office," he said.
There, the fox threw itself at the window, trashed the mail and chewed up the computer, before falling asleep on the dog bed.
Neither Jeff Davis nor Brody required stitches for their wounds, Christina Davis said. Brody's mother, Debbie Padoll said, "(Brody) did not cry, did not make a peep."
Debbie Padoll was at the Davis' house before the fox charged inside. Also at home were the Davis' daughters, ages 9 and 12, and another neighbor.
Sue Ferguson with state Department of Health and Environmental Control said, "Avoid wild animals acting tame and tame animals acting wild."
 
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4 weeks ago, I had taken my wife and daughter on a walk..this is really rare..as I usually head out alone..(my wife is a city girl) ..so this time I just happen to have the 2 of them with me and only a small 4" knife. Not long into our walk, about 25 yards to my front..out walks a huge raccoon, slowly walking accross infront of us. My wife says "look, a raccoon" I say.." get behind me"..and I slowly moved them backwards. This was about 1 pm and sunny out..very rare indeed. I believe this raccoon had distemper, and not rabies..as he looked at us for a moment and swayed from side to side..then slowly walked away..he was some kinda sick. I took them the other way, and that was all we saw of interest.
When he was looking at me..I was worried he would charge..I didnt want to get bit, and I would have in defense of the family unit. Gene
 
Had a rabit fox in the garden once. We called the police and the two officers needed more than 15 shots (9mm from a Sig P6) to kill it. Obviously, it was the caliber's fault, a fine uniformed representative of the almighty government who can carry a gun (unlike the dumb subject I am) is unfailable and not to be blamed, ever! :thumbup:
 
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