Mess with the Moose...
Discussion
It's no laughing matter..
A friend is riding from Toronto to Deadhorse Alaska then from Deadhorse to Ushuaia Patagonia. He's recently arrived in Deadhorse and had 5 encounters with Moose(seseses??) Some passing along the roadside and a couple were with calf's and aggressive.... Thankfully no physical harm but as a lad from Crewe, it's given him an appreciation of the wild
A friend is riding from Toronto to Deadhorse Alaska then from Deadhorse to Ushuaia Patagonia. He's recently arrived in Deadhorse and had 5 encounters with Moose(seseses??) Some passing along the roadside and a couple were with calf's and aggressive.... Thankfully no physical harm but as a lad from Crewe, it's given him an appreciation of the wild

RDMcG said:
I ive in Canada. Moose are dangerous - they are tall and at sunrise/sunset you will see them wandering. I hate driving through areas where they are common. Driving across remote places like Newfoundland is best done in full daylight. I have done it and not a relaxing experience.
When I worked in Sweden, at certain times of the year or day, you would drive with an 'Elk-spotter' who task was to watch out for Elks. In all seriousness, due to their height and bulk, thay can decapitate a driver. The only advice if they cross in front of you is ; steer to the rear, they never walk backwards.Latterly, Volvo devised a thermal imaging device to warn for elks, humans and other animals roaming at night.
Edited by Pica-Pica on Thursday 25th June 17:12
Pica-Pica said:
RDMcG said:
I ive in Canada. Moose are dangerous - they are tall and at sunrise/sunset you will see them wandering. I hate driving through areas where they are common. Driving across remote places like Newfoundland is best done in full daylight. I have done it and not a relaxing experience.
When I worked in Sweden, at certain times of the year or day, you would drive with an 'Elk-spotter' who task was to watch out for Elks. In all seriousness, due to their height and bulk, thay can decapitate a driver. The only advice if they cross in front of you is ; steer to the rear, they never walk backwards.Latterly, Volvo devised a thermal imaging device to warn for elks, humans and other animals roaming at night.
Edited by Pica-Pica on Thursday 25th June 17:12
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