Episode Transcript
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(01:34):
It happened so fast, it knocked me onto the ground, kind of
swiped me. It could have done whatever it
wanted to me. It was really unreal how strong
those creatures are. This is it.
I guess I'm going to die from HPStudio.
This is unnerved. Welcome back to the Unnerved
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podcast. It's where normal people share
their abnormal stories. And if you enjoy true stories of
the strange and terrifying, thenyou're in the right place.
I'm your host, Chris Rickey. A walk in the woods should feel
(02:41):
peaceful and inviting, but nature, though it may appear
untouched and beautiful, is shared with creatures that are
not as keen to share their home with us.
The small, harmless animals willoften catch our attention, but
(03:01):
we should be concerned about thecreatures we don't see until
it's too late. And for four college wrestlers,
that nightmare became a horrifying reality.
In today's story, Kendall and his friends set out on a casual
(03:22):
hike in the Shoshone National Forest in Wyoming.
What started as a simple outing quickly turned into a life or
death battle. This this is story.
My name is Kendall Cummings. On October 15th, almost two
(03:44):
years ago now, the day kind of started off like usual Saturday.
We had wrestling practice that morning and coach told us it was
a nice day. He wanted us to go outside and
do something with ourselves and four other buddies decided
you're going to go out and go see.
We couldn't find any shut antlers.
(04:05):
We were like 20 miles outside ofYellowstone on the Cody side.
Basically every year the deer and elk leads their horns and
we'd go out there and find them.So we were out there doing that.
The day was going good. Be out there from like 10:00
quid, so 6:37. We'd walked all day long.
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We walked there at the end of the mountain and the sun was
starting to go down. We figured we'd better head back
to a truck so we can make it back in the light.
On our way back me and my buddies named Brady.
We decided to stay up on top of the mountain and the other two
went to the bottom of the mountain and we're just going to
head straight back for the trucks.
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We get to a spot where the treesare pretty thick.
I went through the trees and as soon as I got to the other side,
my buddy said, hey, Kendall, there's a lot of bear sign right
here. As soon as you say it jumped
out, I could just hear crashing through the bushes.
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And then I saw the bear. When the bear was coming at him,
he put his arm up to block it I guess, and do all he could do.
And the bear bit his arm and snapped it.
And it happened so fast and I was yelling at the bear.
Hey bear, I tried to grab the sheds from my backpack and they
were clipped in there. I remember I threw a stick and
(05:39):
just kind of bounced off and threw a rock and done the same
thing. And I kind of looked over my
shoulder and saw the rest of themountain And I I did think about
running, but it was a split second I thought about doing
that and then I just jumped downand grabbed the bear.
I don't know if there was a whole lot of thought behind that
one, but put one hand on his earand the other one and on his
(06:03):
scruff right below his head and his neck, and I just pulled as
hard as I can. The bear didn't even move it
kind of like slow. He turned his head and looked at
me. What the heck's pulling on me?
I was thinking, oh, I guess I got to run now.
So I turned and I started running.
I probably took two or three steps.
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It knocked me onto the ground, kind of swiped me, pushed me
into the trees. It could have done whatever it
wanted to me. I had never felt strength like
that. It was really unreal how strong
those creatures are. I was sticking my hands in its
(06:52):
mouth so it couldn't kind of getin my neck and all of a sudden
it just runs away. I started yelling out for my
buddy that got attacked with me,started yelling out, breathing
or yeah, you all right? I didn't hear.
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He didn't say anything back. All I could hear was the bear
was back and he was breathing heavy right behind me.
I couldn't see it. It was kind of like if you're in
a corn maze and you can just seewhere the animals travel
through. I couldn't hear him, but I could
hear him breathing heavy and kind of snarling through his
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nose. And he sounded pretty upset,
kind of watching where I'm hearing this sound from and I
just see his head. And then it turned and looked
right at me. It just had little teeny tiny
black, black eyes. It was like 2 marbles and
charged me again. It got my arm and it got my leg
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and I remember kind of squeezinghis neck as hard as I could, but
when it had my arm, it would pick me up almost off the ground
and shake me. After that, it bit onto my head.
It's bottom jaw kind of got locked up in where your top and
(08:22):
bottom jaw connect, and it's topjust kind of slipping, rolling
off my head. I remember like just grinding.
I didn't really feel none of it.It's kind of like when you go to
the dentist and they numb in. You can feel that they're
working on your teeth, but it doesn't hurt.
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I think I just had so much adrenaline.
I remember when it did bite through my head, it was like if
you twisted the water bottle a whole lot and poked it with a
pen and just all that pressure escaped.
That's what it felt like in my head.
That's when I was like, man, this is it.
I guess I'm going to die. When I felt pressure release in
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my head, I, I thought that was it.
And I laid down and I thought that's I can't do nothing else.
So I did just kind of lay down and limp.
After that, the bird kind of putits paw on my head and put some
weight down and then it got off of me and scooped some dirt on
top of me and wandered off Bearsand like mountain lions and
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stuff. When they kill a deer or elk,
they they'll bury it kind of preserves it, keeps the birds
off of it. I was laying there simply, I'm
going to die. I went to get my phone out of my
pocket. I was going to call my mom and
kind of let her know. But the bear, when it bit my
leg, it bit into my phone and just crunched it broke it.
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So I was just laying there kind of trying to collect myself.
After a while, I, I unclipped mybackpack and I remember that
that's when the pain was kind ofcoming.
When I unclipped my backpack, I felt like every single one of my
fingers was broken. That hurt a lot.
When it bit my arm, it had tore the bicep completely off, so
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that hurt. Started walking down the
mountain, looking over my shoulder.
I kept looking back and I was scared I was going to come back
and get me, but fortunately it didn't.
I walked probably like a plug a mile before I found one of the
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two buddies that had gone to thebottom of the hill, my buddy
Brady. As soon as I pulled the bear off
of him, he rundown on 911 and I found those two and told him
what had happened. The one of them stayed with
Brady and the other one was coming back up for me.
I met him halfway. I remember asking him I was like
Gus, how do I look? And he's like, you look, you
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look good man. I was like no, no, no, no, not
the people eyeing me. How do I look?
And he's like, you look good. We started wandering off and had
my arm over him and he was kind of helping me and limp down the
mountain when we got to the bottom.
When you call 911, something like that happens.
They alert everybody in the area.
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They say, you know, there's a bear attack right above your
ranch. The ranchers had met us at the
bottom of the hill and they're side by side.
They zipped us over to the trailhead and there was an
ambulance waiting there. They cut all my clothes off and
checked me out and then giving me some blood and stuff and then
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a helicopter. Kane picked me up and got to the
hospital in Billings. They cleaned up the dry blood
and checking out my wounds even more.
And then they wheeled me back for surgery.
And I remember the doctor kind of saying, Are you ready?
And I said Yep. And then I woke up.
I think I had 70 staples in my head.
(12:25):
And they said hundreds of stitches altered around my body.
I guess they when they were doing surgery on my face, they
found pieces of the bear's toothup in my cheek, apparently don't
take good care of their teeth and they fall off when they're
chewing on hard bone like that. College friends and wrestlers
who were attacked by a bear in Wyoming.
(12:47):
They fought it off. And this morning they're sharing
their story. Modalenge joins us with more
about how they survive and got away.
Good morning, Mola. Good morning, Michael.
Yeah, these guys are lucky to bealive, and they know it.
They tell me that at one point they were convinced that one of
them wasn't going to make it, that he was dead.
But his teammates, his friends, they wouldn't let that happen.
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Just for us to walk out of therealive, all four of us, it's a
miracle. It really is with the situation
we were in with. This morning, 4 college
wrestlers grateful to be alive and for each other after perhaps
their toughest match going toe to toe with a grizzly bear.
I just knew I had to protect my head and, and just kind of fight
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for life, you know, it's life ordeath.
Northwest College students Braden Lowry, Kendall Cummings,
August Harrison and Oran Jacksonwere searching for fallen
antlers in Wyoming's Shoshone National Forest on Saturday when
all of a sudden, Lowry and Cummings came face to face with
the Bear. The Bear pounced, tackling Lowry
first. The bear came running out of the
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trees. I I didn't even see it until it
was right in front of me but I heard the crashing and and the
only thing I could yell was. Bear, bear and.
I yelled. Baron the Bear tackled me first.
Seeing his teammate being mauled, Cummings took the fight
to the bear, yelling, punching and grabbing it until the bear
turned on him. And knocked me onto the ground
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and then with its head pushed meon the ground all the way up
against the trees, and then kindof pinned me up there.
And it was attacking me for a second.
It was. I was putting my hands in its
mouth and stuff so it wouldn't be chewing on my neck and
everything. The bear finally walking away,
but the horror not over. Just when they thought they were
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to clear, the bear returned. I.
Called out to Brady. I was like Brady.
You all right? Where you at, Brady?
And then? I didn't hear nothing from
Brady, but I heard the bear kindof grunting behind me and I
heard it walking and then I saw it again and it came and it
attacked me again. Eventually, Lowry and Cummings
able to escape, calling 911 and reuniting with their teammates.
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I spoke with the lady on the phone, the dispatch lady, and we
kind of coordinated a plan to get the flight for life there.
I remember telling her that's our brother up there.
Cummings airlifted to Billings Clinic Hospital, getting 60
staples in his head. Lowry taken to the same hospital
by ambulance, treated for a compound fracture in his left
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arm. Surprised to hear that they
fought for each other. The way they did.
No, no, not at all. Not at all.
I, I, you know, growing up in a wrestling world, it's just the
kind of brotherhood that there is.
They'll fight for each other. Experts saying the outcome could
have been much worse if they didn't have each other and.
The two against one seem to, youknow, tip the scales to their
advantage, and he was very luckyto chase the bear off that way.
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Now, as they recover, broken andbloody, their friendship
stronger than ever. I'm happy that everyone's here
and everyone's all right. In the last few weeks, there has
been an increase in reported bear activity in this region,
especially at low elevations, according to the Wyoming Game
and Fish Department. They tell me that that is common
this time of year as bears are more active in their search for
(16:01):
food Guys. Thank you.
Just even think about it. That is frightening.
Thank goodness they're all OK. I was in the hospital for five
or six days and then they let mego and I went back to the
college town that I was in and collected some things and my
parents took me down to my housewhere I live and they took care
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of me for two weeks. I think I had a Walker and
everything. But after two weeks, it got kind
of that good and I would say it was like 2 months or so and now
I was kind of lightly wrestling again, doing some of that stuff.
And by the end of the year, I was totally wrestling and my
buddy actually got to compete again night and year.
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We were practice partners right there towards the end.
So that was that was cool. Tonight here on the campus of
Northwest College in Powell, an encouraging update on 4
wrestlers, 2 of them lucky to bealive.
I've probably told the story 1000 times.
Hundreds, probably. A lot.
A lot, and it serves up a motionevery time.
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The story is well documented, even drawing national attention.
This is Kendall Cummings. He and three of his wrestling
teammates were shed hunting or searching for antlers about a
year and a half ago. Here they'd split into pairs.
Me and my buddy unfortunately got a attacked by a bear.
He got attacked first. I ended up grabbing the bear,
pulling it off of him. You heard that right.
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Cummings attempted to pull the bear off Brady, Lowry and.
The bear chewed on me for a while.
Fortunately, I lived through it and my friends came up the hill
for me and we all made it out oftheir lives.
Oren Jackson vividly remembers first sight of his friend.
The most gruesome thing really was when we found Kendall.
He was walking down to us and his entire body was just covered
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in blood. Cheek was all tore up and he was
scalloped on the head. Skin pretty much falling off his
face and covered and drenched inblood.
Reflecting now on his impulse tophysically attack a bear,
Cummings admits he sometimes thinks to himself, who does
that? I do it from time to time, kind
of think back on it. It was just instincts and it
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happened so fast. Being underneath it felt huge,
but I bet it was like 400 lbs. So what are these four friends
up to today? Well, three of them spend a lot
of time here in the team's smalllocker room.
Slash home away from home. We take turns getting longer
done. Jackson is ranked #5 in the
country at 165 lbs and wrestles this week as Northwest takes 8
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to the national tournament. This will be Jackson's last as
he heads toward graduation. My goal is to be a national
champion. If if you're not going to the
national tournament with that goal, then you shouldn't be
going at all. As for Cummings?
Kind of train with the guys and helping them get to where they
want to be. He'll graduate with a business
degree and wants to open a real estate brokerage.
August Harrison graduated last year and is now a volunteer
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assistant coach for the Trappers.
It's awesome. I love watching the kids improve
every day and helping them get to to help them make their goal.
He's been a big help to me, helping me, you know, perfect
little details in my wrestling. And this is Lowry, the friend
coming saved that Saturday afternoon.
He suffered a compound forearm fracture, grinded through a
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three month recovery, then completely defied odds at last
year's national tournament. Having not won much, the guy
rolls all the way to the semifinals with three pins,
beating a four seed and a five seed, and ends up on the podium
in the 5th place. Lowry graduated.
He's now a plumber and volunteer, coaching at a high
school in Idaho. Though distance separates him,
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the four remain close. Huge success story for each and
every one of these young men. They do still shed hunt, though,
more prepared and vigilant. There's a lot of mountains that
are much safer than where we were that day, so we try to hang
out there as much as we can. Ziegler admits he's always been
uneasy with the outings, and nowmore than ever.
Yeah, I'm still uncomfortable with it.
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Just the thought of it terrifiesme.
Still, he's proud. Northwest College has provided
every opportunity for the guys to succeed, and they've done it.
True resilience, you know, in the face of adversity, they made
it through. If anyone else has concern about
being out in the wild and hike and whatnot, what words of
advice would you give to them asfar as keeping the situation
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from happening to them? Be prepared and definitely have
bear spray if a guns you're saying go for it and I think I'm
going to go buy a dog from the pound or something, start hiking
with it. But I think that we're in the
wrong place at the wrong time and we were, we were in his
house. So that would be my advice.
(20:50):
Just be prepared. It can definitely happen, and it
happens quick. In the United States, there are
an average of 27 bear attacks per year.
Of these, a small number are fatal, with studies suggesting
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an average of two to three fatalgrizzly bear attacks.
Non fatal attacks are more common, with approximately 30 to
40 reported each year. It's likely that when Kendall
stopped fighting the bear, the bear thought he was dead, which
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in the end saved his life. Experts say that playing dead is
exactly what you're supposed to do once you're being attacked by
a brown bear. They say to lay on your stomach,
hover your neck with your hands,and play dead, then give the
bear time to clear the area before you get up to escape.
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The advice online for bear encounters varies so much based
on specific circumstances that it's probably best to do your
own research before planning anyrecreational activities in bear
country. But everyone seems to agree that
hiking in groups is helpful, which is a safety tip that can
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also help you in other dangerousscenarios that could be awaiting
you. Thanks again for listening to
(22:42):
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