Published August 26, 2013,
UPDATE: Noah Graham, of Solway, Minn., suffered puncture wounds on the left and right sides of his face.    
     By:        Sam Cook, Duluth News Tribune   
                       A 16-year-old Solway, Minn., boy was injured in an apparent wolf  attack early Saturday morning as he rested in his tent on Lake  Winnibigoshish near Cass Lake, according to the Minnesota Department of  Natural Resources.
Noah Graham suffered puncture wounds on the left and right sides of his face.
“I  had to reach behind me and jerk my head out of its mouth,” he said  after being treated for non-life-threatening injuries at a Bemidji  hospital.
The incident occurred at the U.S. Forest Service’s West  Winnie Campground, near where the Mississippi River enters Lake  Winnibigoshish. The campground was closed and evacuated Saturday and  remains closed, according to the DNR.
“The canine approached him  from the rear and before he realized it was there, it had bit him in the  back of his head,” said Tom Provost, DNR regional enforcement  supervisor in Grand Rapids. “His first indication was when he had its  jaws clamped down on his head.”
“He’s got puncture wounds on his  head and an 11-centimeter (4.3-inch) wound that had to be closed,” said  Cheri Zeppelin, DNR Northeast Region information officer in Grand  Rapids.
Wolf attacks on humans are extremely rare, Provost said. He called the incident “a freak deal.”
“It’s  the first one I’m aware of (in Minnesota),” he said. “I’m not aware of  another where there was physical damage to the victim.”
A wolf  matching the description of the animal that attacked Graham was trapped  and killed at the campground early today by the Wildlife Services  division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Provost said. The wolf  was transported to the University of Minnesota Veterinary Diagnostic Lab  in St. Paul for a necropsy.
DNA testing could confirm if the wolf that was trapped is the same one that attacked Graham, Provost said.
Graham  said he received a shot to combat rabies after the attack. The wolf  will be tested for rabies, and results of that testing should be  available Tuesday or Wednesday, Provost said.
“I won’t be sleeping  outside, again, any time soon,” said Graham, who was talking to his  girlfriend just before the wolf attacked without warning. “There was no  sound at all; didn’t hear it. It was just all of a sudden there.”
Graham’s girlfriend fled during the attack.
“She  ran and got in her Jeep right away,” he said, and two members of the  camping party slept through the screaming, kicking and fighting, he  said.
The wolf that was trapped was a 75-pound male, an  average-sized wolf, Provost said. He said the wolf that was trapped had a  deformed jaw that might have made it difficult for the wolf to acquire  food by taking down large prey. No other wolves were seen at the  campground, Provost said.
After the wolf attacked Graham, sometime between 4 and 4:30 a.m. Saturday, he struggled with it briefly.
“After  I got up, I was kicking at it and screaming at it, and it wouldn’t  leave,” he said. “But then after a while I got it to run away.”
Statements  from other campers indicated there were other incidents at the  campground where an animal bit through tents, one resulting in the  puncturing of an air mattress, according to the DNR. Another camper  indicated that he saw a wolf near his campsite with coloration and  markings matching the description of the animal believed to have  attacked Graham, a DNR news release stated.
“I thought it was a big coyote, but I guess it’s a wolf,” Graham said.
There  have been two wolf-attack fatalities in North America in the past  decade, according to the DNR. One was in northern Canada and another was  in Alaska.
According to Dr. L. David Mech, a wolf researcher with  the University of Minnesota and the U.S. Geological Survey, writing on  the International Wolf Center website: “Two interesting wolf-human  encounters in Northeastern Minnesota add further to the mix of ways in  which wolves have interacted with humans, without the humans coming out  seriously injured.
“The first incident involved a logger who saw  two wolves attacking a deer nearby. The logger picked up his dog, which  had become extremely frightened by the deer attack. One of the wolves  charged toward the man and dog, catching a lower fang on the logger’s  black-and-red checkered wool shirt and slicing a 6-inch gash in the  material. As the wolf tried to yank free from the logger’s clothes, its  jaws opened wide and the logger looked right down the animal’s throat.
“ ‘It wasn’t me the wolf was attacking,’ the logger said. ‘He was trying to get the dog who just happened to be in my arms.’ ”
The  second Minnesota incident, according to Mech, left a 19-year-old hunter  with a long scratch from a wolf’s claws. The man had been hunting  snowshoe hares deep in a thick swamp north of Duluth during a snowstorm,  Mech wrote.
“He was wearing his deer-hunting jacket, which was  well anointed with buck scent,” Mech wrote. “Suddenly a wolf hit him  from behind and knocked him over onto his back. As the wolf stood over  him, the startled hunter managed to fire his .22-caliber rifle. The wolf  appeared to come to its senses and fled, leaving the hunter with a long  scratch.”
source
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
16-year-old boy attacked by wolf at Lake Winnie, MN
Posted on 9:40 PM by Unknown
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