Thought everyone understood that wild animals can be dangerous, but mostly hide or run away.
Only laid eyes on a panther once. It had checked me out ahead of time, utterly ignored me. Only seen one gator that wasn’t hauling ass away from my canoe or kayak. Saw a mama black bear with tiny babies galumphing along behind as she ran off. Went back the next day, couldn’t see her, but I heard the warning! Water moccasins hiss and pitch a fit, run away. You’d have to be deaf and step on one. (I’ve come close!)
Then you got people like my wife. She went to meet me at the trail entrance the other night, saw a small animal cross the path, got spooked and ran back to her car. Daughter and I saw a roll of teenage armadillos, up close! My wife asked if they would attack us.
Wife’s friend came over from England. She was choking down panic and the sun set on our camp in the swamp. I assured her that speaking in a normal tone of voice would scare anything away. Never been in wild woods and never at night!
I’ve had people online act like I’m an idiot for getting into the uncivilized places I often go. Many people here in NW Florida won’t go on the water unless it’s a large body and in a large boat. They think I’m going to get attacked in my kayak.
So, what’s your perception of the animals where you live? Do you think the people in your area feel the same?
I volunteer with wild animals, so I purposely do a lot of things animals may or may not like that most people won’t normally do.
Very few animals will want to hurt you. Animals will do very little they don’t have to do. This comes down to 2 main things: calories are precious, and there is no medical care. If you aren’t food or pose a potential threat, they want nothing to do with you. Wasting calories and getting injuries makes it harder to get a next meal.
The classic fight/flight response has evolved into something more along the lines of fight/flight/freeze/fawn. Animals aren’t dumb, and in almost every way their muscles and abilities are better than yours, so there are multiple options they have, and they will pick what they think is best.
They also have unique personalities, and won’t all react the same. I have more scary squirrels at work than I do raptors.
It is also common to have small songbirds drive off hawks or owls, and the raptors just move on instead of fighting because the energy required and the potential for injury to fight isn’t worth it. If you’re messing with a nest, they may go after you, they may not.
Animals get dangerous when you take away some of their options, like the classic cornered animal. If you take away the option to flee, why wouldn’t they think you’re there to hurt them, and they will hurt you to protect themselves. Most will make noise to scare you so you go away or back off and give them an opening. If you get your hands on them and you are calm, they will often wait to see what you’re going to do.
Learning how animals react to things and seeing how unique their personalities/risk tolerances are is one of my favorite parts of working with them. People act like animals are generic NPCs, but they’ve got unique minds that are the results of their collected experiences, just like ours.
I see the personalities in my yard squirrels and the squirrels out back, way off in the woods. I can get about 20’ from a yard squirrel, they’re fairly tame. Their country cousins run so fast I usually only hear rattling leaves.
Never seen “fawn” included!
I hadn’t seen fawn on there before either. I looked up fight/flight/freeze and saw I was out of date myself. 😔
Now we know!
Solid addition to the “startle/scared” response. I’ve seen many animals do that thing, especially dogs. My tiny female boxer ran up on a tinier dog, it dropped, belly up, pissed itself.
Thanks for sharing! This is fascinating to me, do you have any resource I can read more about this topic?
Glad you liked it! I’m always up for encouraging you all to learn about your animal neighbors.
This one focuses on Fawn.
This one is about Freeze in humans and animals. Skip the abstract and the rest isn’t too bad to read. This one is a lot more technical but has good charts.
After that, if you want more, just searching “fight flight freeze” will give you a ton. The “fawn” gets called a few different things so leaving it off might get you more results and you can add “human” or “animal” if you want specific things for those categories.
I like to study what animals are around before I’m in an unfamiliar habitat so I know what to expect. I’m not really afraid of any animals unless the situation calls for it. There’s a number of potentially dangerous animals that live around here, all are incredibly unlikely to ever attack me. The risk of catching Lyme disease from a tick is what really concern me more than any wild animal I might encounter.
9 out of 10 if I leave them alone they will leave me alone.
I’m from the PNW, my life has been spent in the outdoors and I have backpacked alone in the Cascade mountains. I’m of the opinion that wild animals are more frightened of me than I could be of them. I fear encountering a hungry cougar but otherwise I don’t really have any fear of other animals. I don’t want to encounter a momma bear and her cubs nor a mother moose with her calf. Those are two things I would be feeling is dangerous.
But snakes, wolves, or whatever other nasties that I might find in my neck of the woods, don’t really make me scared.
Moose can dive and swim under water. That means there is a non zero chance that you will be killed while scuba diving by a moose.
Moose is a good example of an animal that might kill you for looking at him funny in rutting season. Especially if you have a dog.
is it hungry? is it desperate? is it horny? does it feel threatened?
if yes, then they are a danger to me.
In Britain we don’t have dangerous wildlife. Only thing close to spicy is the adder, and they’re extremely rare and shy, their homes are all signposted and protected. The most killing animal we have is the cow. Don’t wander into a herd like an idiot, stay away from bulls, and there’s no problems. So it’s a bit jarring to have to worry about animals.
I’ve encountered wild bears while hiking and wasn’t scared. They were just black bears, tho. The smallest and most easily frightened bear. 🤷♂️
Im in the UK so basically every wild animal is scared of humans. (Edit : Except geese. Theyre fucking bullies)
If I was in “The Wild” though, like a jungle or Savannah, I would shit my pants 24/7
Came here to say this. Scariest encounter I had was earlier this year with a stag. He was standing on a footpath, it was dusk and he was shadow so I didn’t see him until I was 5m away. I’m 1.9m and he was looking down at me. Had another 1m of antlers. Then my dog started barking and he just turned and walked away into the trees.
Same dog once tried to fight a pair of geese, she’s similar size to them, they didn’t back down.
Where I live they mostly mind their own business but from time to time I have to yell to scare away some wild boars just in case, luckily they aren’t used to people and run away pretty easily.
Most will run, some will attack if cornered. Walk along the wind and make human noises and you won’t be bothered.
Anything big enough to be scary is scary. Deer and coyotes.
Australia has a reputation for dangerous wildlife but… just don’t touch them. The only animals that might deliberately come up to you and attack would be salt water crocs and drop bears but they’re only found in very specific areas so just be careful when visiting up far north. Everything else (fresh water crocs, dingoes, snakes, etc) will keep their distance so keep your own distance and don’t bother them and you’ll be fine.
If the animal can physically hurt me, i will keep my distance. E.g. i don’t mess with cows in a field, even though they are likely harmless. I usually have to cross fields when going to fishing spots. During the summer they are full of animals that could EASILY kill me by mistake. Therefore i keep my distance.
Smaller animals and bugs that i know aren’t venomous don’t bother in the slightest.
Growing up rural gives one a healthy respect for animals. I once knew a banty rooster who was known to have killed 2 snakes and a hawk going after his hens. I saw that rooster chase grown men and I did not laugh. I would have run from that feathery violence too.
I live in Australia
I find it hilarious how stupid Americans think everything here is trying to kill us constantly
Most people go their whole life never seeing a snake
Crocs are only in certain parts of the country, sharks aren’t a problem unless you are really unlucky
Our spiders are fine
I live somewhere with wildlife all around me, and it’s fantastic. There were three wallabies doing their thing where I was walking my dog yesterday and they’re lovely
Most people go their whole life never seeing a snake
That’s crazy to me. Are snakes just incredibly rare in Australia or does everyone just stay inside?
We have sharks, snakes, alligators, and bears where I live in the U.S. and I’ve seen them all in the wild. Snakes by far being the most common I’ve encountered.
What about drop bears?