The Niagara Falls Review

Angler fights off attacking badger

- NICK FARIS

At first, Ron Lancour thought the creature in the lake was a waterfowl.

Lancour was fishing nearly a kilometre from shore on Sheridan Lake in inland British Columbia. The lake was mostly quiet midday last Friday, but something was swimming toward the front of his boat.

During the coming minutes, Lancour learned his visitor was not a bird. Nor was it calm. It was a badger, snarling at the snout, heading straight for Lancour and his fishing lines.

“He was coming in my boat whether I liked it or not, and he was telling me to get out,” Lancour, 70, said Wednesday.

He did not expect to confront a badger. An hour into the fishing trip, he was half-asleep, expending just enough energy to check on the lines dangling out the back of the boat. Suddenly, he was under siege.

“I just glanced to the front of my boat, and that’s when I seen this critter swimming in the water,” Lancour said .“It kind of disappeare­d from sight. I couldn’t see it as it went around the side of the boat.

“I went to the side to look over, and then I heard him come snarling over the transom, between the motors. Right away, as soon as I saw his face, I knew what it was. I know badge rs, and I didn’t want him in the boat with me.”

Lancour had a few advantages. He said he is quick-witted when it comes to dealing with animals, having encountere­d nuisance wildlife throughout his years as a trapper.

While the badger was big — about 10 kilograms based on Lancour’s frantic estimate — it could not, of course, wield tools.

Poking at the badger would not suffice, so Lancour knew he had to stun it. Only a forceful smack on the nose would send it tumbling off the boat.

But even as he defended himself, Lancour managed to keep a broader concern in mind: There are only 200 or so badgers left in B.C. They are classified as endangered and inadverten­tly killing one, even as it tried to maul him, would be a shame.

“I didn’t want to just really bat him one,” Lancour said. “I was pushing on him with a paddle, and I just about got him in the water, and he came back again. He was gaining on me. I just gave him a little harder rap on the nose and I broke my paddle. But I was able to push him in the water.”

In the days since the faceoff, Lancour has spoken with a B.C. badger expert, who told him badgers often traverse lakes in search of new territory. “He also said they’re very docile and not aggressive,” Lancour said. “I guess they have to rewrite the book of badger now.”

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