Los Angeles Times

Man gored by Catalina bison

Off-duty firefighte­rs help conservati­onist who suffered a punctured lung.

- By Ruben Vives and Joseph Serna ruben.vives@latimes.com joseph.serna@latimes.com

Bleeding and flat on the ground, Chris Baker tried to play dead in hopes the huge bison that had just gored him would lose interest and wander off.

The animal sniffed, snorted and stood over Baker before finally trotting off. Baker pulled himself to his feet and staggered along a trail near Tower Peak on Santa Catalina Island, looking for help.

He eventually ran into three off-duty firefighte­rs who called paramedics. Baker, 43, was later airlifted to Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, where he remains in stable condition and is expected to make a full recovery.

The details of Baker’s way-too-close encounter with the bison on Wednesday were described by the man’s mother, who credited the firefighte­rs with saving her son’s life.

“He would not have made it back if he hadn’t miraculous­ly ran into the firefighte­rs,” Elaine Garan said. “They were amazing; they helped him and called the paramedics.

“He would have been a goner,” she added.

Garan said the bison broke at least six of her son’s ribs and punctured a lung.

Contrary to previous reports, Baker, who founded American Conservati­on Experience, a nonprofit organizati­on that focuses on environmen­tal projects, was not taking photos of the bison before the attack but was surveying the area for the creation of trails on the island, according to his mother and a spokeswoma­n for ACE.

The Los Angeles County Fire Department said it responded to the island about 8:30 a.m. Wednesday after receiving a report of a person being “gored by a buffalo,” said Chris Reade, a department inspector.

Reade said bison attacks on the island are rare.

In 2007, a 24-year-old man suffered a fractured pelvic bone when he was attacked by a bison, part of a herd of 15 that charged a group of hikers. And in 2012, a 9-year-old boy was struck by a bison that was spooked by sightseers near Little Harbor. The boy suffered a minor stomach injury.

The American bison is not native to Catalina Island. A herd of about 14 were brought to the island in 1924 to act as a backdrop to a silent film. Several more were brought to the island to help increase genetic variation, according to the Catalina Island Conservanc­y.

The bison help generate tourism on the island and have been embraced by residents.

“We see them all the time,” Reade said. “They’re usually not aggressive.”

Most often they come across as being lazy, but the temperamen­t of bison can be unpredicta­ble.

“They’re real stubborn,” Reade said. “You honk at ’em. They don’t move. Then you just go around them.”

The conservanc­y uses contracept­ion to keep the island’s bison population at 150, although the herd has recently dropped to an estimated 135.

 ?? Lori Shepler Los Angeles Times ?? THE AMERICAN BISON on Catalina Island are not native; about 14 were brought in for a silent film shoot in 1924. The herd stands at about 135 today, but an L.A. County fire official said attacks on humans are rare.
Lori Shepler Los Angeles Times THE AMERICAN BISON on Catalina Island are not native; about 14 were brought in for a silent film shoot in 1924. The herd stands at about 135 today, but an L.A. County fire official said attacks on humans are rare.

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