Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Yellowstone Calls Out Park Visitor For 'Disturbing' Bison Calf And Leading To Its Death

Yellowstone Calls Out Park Visitor For 'Disturbing' Bison Calf And Leading To Its Death
Hellen Jack

Yellowstone National Park reminded visitors to 'respect' wildlife at the park after a man tried to help a newborn bison calf who was ultimately rejected by its herd and had to be euthanized.

Bison as with all wildlife in Yellowstone National Park are wild. Visitors shouldn't touch them, yet every year people do which results in injury or death for people or animals.

Park regulations require visitors stay at least 25 yards (75 feet) from all wildlife except bears and wolves which require a minimum of 100 yards (300 feet) distance be maintained.


Unfortunately an as yet unidentified man decided to ignore park regulations, resulting in the eventual euthanizing of a newborn bison calf.

Despite bison surviving for millennia in North America without human intervention, the man decided a newborn bison calf needed his help.

Yellowstone National Park reported:

"An unidentified White male in his 40-50's, wearing a blue shirt and black pants, approached a newborn bison calf in Lamar Valley near the confluence of the Lamar River and Soda Butte Creek."
"...the man pushed the calf up from the river and onto the roadway. Visitors later observed the calf walk up to and follow cars and people."

While the calf's original situation might have resulted in its death, the man's choice to interfere ensured its demise.

Every year the wildlife in national parks are born, live and die without tourists' help. The animals that die become food for predators and scavengers.

It's a fact of life that tourists should recognize and respect—or limit their interactions with wildlife to zoos.

The National Park Service stated:

"Interference by people can cause wildlife to reject their offspring. In this case, park rangers tried repeatedly to reunite the calf with the herd. These efforts failed."
"The calf was later killed by park staff because it was abandoned by the herd and causing a hazardous situation by approaching cars and people along the roadway."

The NPS continued:

"Approaching wild animals can drastically affect their well-being and, in this case, their survival."
"Disregarding these regulations can result in fines, injury, and even death."
"The safety of these animals, as well as human safety, depends on everyone using good judgment and following these simple rules."

Some recognized the man ignored park regulations, dooming the calf.

But online armchair park rangers demonstrated why NPS has to rescue tourists and euthanize wildlife unnecessarily.

They, of course, knew more than wildlife and conservation professionals.



Other uninformed experts questioned why the NPS couldn't fix the man's mistake by sending a newborn calf to a nonexistent rescue.

But farmers and ranchers pushed passage of strict regulations for moving bison out of Yellowstone.

NPS informed those ignorant of the laws they're required to abide by.

One person—who did the reading—recommended the laws be rewritten.

However a change in law doesn't negate the viability issues of a newborn animal or the expense of transport and care.

Large animal rescue and rehabilitation organizations are rare because of the logistics and expense.

A sad event all around.

Yellowstone National Park said the incident is currently under investigation and asked that anyone with information on the visitor who disturbed the calf call the Yellowstone National Park Tip Line at 307-344-2132 or email them at YELL_Tip@nps.gov.

More from Trending

Sabrina Carpenter and Madonna at Coachella
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Coachella

Madonna Pleads For Safe Return Of Vintage Clothes From Her Sabrina Carpenter Coachella Performance After They Go Missing

Madonna and Sabrina Carpenter's performance at the second weekend of Coachella is pretty much THE pop culture event of the moment, but it ended on something of a low note for the Queen of Pop.

Madonna joined Carpenter onstage to celebrate both the 20th anniversary of her 2006 performance at Coachella to promote Confessions On A Dance Floor, and the forthcoming release of its sequel, Confessions II.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alex Jones and

Alex Jones Has Shirtless Meltdown After 'The Onion' Reaches Deal To Take Over 'InfoWars': 'They're Body Snatchers!'

On Monday, InfoWars founder Alex Jones flipped out, crashing an X livestream shirtless, in reaction to The Onion's bid to license his website and all associated branding potentially moving forward.

In November 2024, Global Tetrahedron, parent company of The Onion, attempted to buy InfoWars through a bankruptcy auction, but the move was blocked by the judge overseeing sales of Jones' property.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Tim Cook
Alex Wong/Getty Images; John Nacion/FilmMagic

Trump Just Shared A Truly Unhinged Tribute To Tim Cook After He Announced He's Stepping Down As Apple CEO—And, Hoo Boy

President Donald Trump shared an unhinged tribute to Apple CEO Tim Cook—whom he again referred to as "Tim Apple"—following Cook's announcement that Apple will have a new leader starting in September, openly reminiscing about all the times Cook would call him to "kiss my ass."

Cook took over from Steve Jobs and reshaped Apple by leaning on his operations expertise. He streamlined and expanded global supply chains, introduced Apple-designed chips, and pushed the company beyond hardware into services, launching subscription offerings like Apple News, Apple TV+, and Apple Pay, which have since become major revenue drivers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez; Donald Trump
Andres Kudacki/Getty Images; Alex Brandon/Pool/Getty Images

AOC Offers Hilarious Take On Why Trump's Golfing Amid Iran War Might Actually Be A Good Thing

New York Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez spoke frankly with MeidasTouch Network's Pablo Menriquez when asked about President Donald Trump's second-term golfing habits, pointing out why Americans might actually want him on the "golf course more than you want him in the Oval Office."

She said it was “awful” that Trump was golfing while the U.S. is at war with Iran and facing rising prices, arguing he should be focused on his responsibilities instead.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ahlex Jones; Donald Trump
@RealAlexJones/X; Allison Robbert/For The Washington Post via Getty Images

Alex Jones Claims Trump Has A 'Deal' With The 'Deep State' To Throw The Midterms—And MAGA Is Crashing Out Hard

Former friend of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump, grifter, and right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones widened the gap between himself and the MAGA movement he helped create back in 2015.

In the caption for his five-minute video posted to X on Friday, Jones wrote:

Keep ReadingShow less