powderburn
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Hunter shot while toting deer decoy
By SARAH KENNEDY, CALGARY SUN
In a rare twist, a hunter saw himself on the opposite end of a rifle and was shot after the deer decoy he was carrying was mistaken for the real thing.
The 42-year-old victim and his friend were trudging through the backcountry of Cochrane, just west of the Bar C Ranch, yesterday afternoon with a fake deer when the shot was fired.
Witnesses say that, from a distance, the phony deer was mistaken for a real animal by another hunting party.
The single bullet ripped through the man's lower abdomen and came out his back.
A resident spotted the victim and placed him in the back of his pickup truck and drove him out of the woods.
They waited on the side of Hwy. 940 for help to arrive just after 2:30 p.m.
Paramedic Jory Jenson said they stabilized the local hunter until STARS airlifted him to Foothills hospital.
He is currently in serious but stable condition but the situation could have been far more severe, said Jenson.
"It definitely could have been fatal," he said. "Those bullets are meant to kill animals and this had the potential to kill him."
Cochrane RCMP and Kananaskis conservation officers are still investigating the shooting. The victim's name has not been released.
By SARAH KENNEDY, CALGARY SUN
In a rare twist, a hunter saw himself on the opposite end of a rifle and was shot after the deer decoy he was carrying was mistaken for the real thing.
The 42-year-old victim and his friend were trudging through the backcountry of Cochrane, just west of the Bar C Ranch, yesterday afternoon with a fake deer when the shot was fired.
Witnesses say that, from a distance, the phony deer was mistaken for a real animal by another hunting party.
The single bullet ripped through the man's lower abdomen and came out his back.
A resident spotted the victim and placed him in the back of his pickup truck and drove him out of the woods.
They waited on the side of Hwy. 940 for help to arrive just after 2:30 p.m.
Paramedic Jory Jenson said they stabilized the local hunter until STARS airlifted him to Foothills hospital.
He is currently in serious but stable condition but the situation could have been far more severe, said Jenson.
"It definitely could have been fatal," he said. "Those bullets are meant to kill animals and this had the potential to kill him."
Cochrane RCMP and Kananaskis conservation officers are still investigating the shooting. The victim's name has not been released.