Posted on 04/12/2007 5:38:26 AM PDT by siunevada
New Jersey Boy Saves 22-Month-Old Nephew From Mauling By Wild Animal In Backyard
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"My dad turned to walk away and it came running back at him. I yelled, 'Dad, it's coming for you!'
Ryan Palludan, 11
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(AP) A Middletown 11-year-old is a hero for helping save his toddler nephew from being mauled by a coyote.
Ryan Palludan helped free 22-month-old nephew Liam Sadler from the animal's jaws and then chased the coyote into the woods.
State wildlife officials are saying it could be the first coyote attack on a human in New Jersey.
Playing in the back yard of his Middletown Township home with his 22-month-old nephew over the weekend, Ryan Palludan, 11, first thought the animal that bolted into the yard just before dark was a deer.
But when it grabbed little Liam Sadler, Palludan instinctively sprang into action, yelling and kicking at the attacker which was later determined to be a coyote.
"It ran real fast, and in 10 seconds it was on Liam's back, biting the back of his head and his neck," Palludan said. "My dad and I chased it into the woods, and my sister got Liam inside.
"My dad turned to walk away and it came running back at him. I yelled, 'Dad, it's coming for you!' and he chased it away again. But it didn't go all the way into the woods," Palludan explained. "It was kind of staying on the edge."
The toddler's grandfather, Philip Palludan, who is familiar with coyotes having seen them in the western U.S., said the animal that attacked the toddler was about the size of a German shepherd.
Authorities were still looking for the animal Tuesday.
Township administrator Robert Czech said that while officials do not have independent confirmation, the attack on the toddler and the descriptions of a few other possible sightings may mean coyotes are lurking in nearby neighborhoods. The township is some 40 miles southwest of New York City.
Liam, who lives in Crestview, Florida, is undergoing a series of rabies shots as a precaution. He suffered bites on his head and neck, but is doing fine, relatives said.
Coyotes who venture into populated area have been in the news recently in other places. Last week, one sauntered into a Chicago sandwich restaurant through an open door, and plopped down inside a walk-in cooler filled with soda and juice before animal control officers removed it.
And on Tuesday, a coyote caused a stir in downtown Detroit, running loose for about one hour before being captured by local animal control officers.
Wile E. Coyote has rabies?
That would be a very big coyote. Maybe a coydog -- which might also make it less instinctively afraid of humans.
Whatever it was, it was hungry enough to go after a baby when someone was close by... scary.
I have a family of red foxes that have turned up (first time in 20 years) sleeping on the roof of my shed during the day. I’ve read that the foxes do that because coyotes can’t climb up and get them.
I will say that this is the first winter season we haven’t caught one mouse in the house.
:-)
Two words: Global Warming.
Why was an 11 year old hanging out at a bar?
The coyote was heard to mutter, “who is endangered now?”
I hate coyotes. My best friend Oscar (Yorkie) was killed by one in our yard.
Maybe they get bigger in the East with a more abundant food supply. Or thicker coats. Plus it was dusk, who knows what grandpa saw. Since it was a threat it probably looked huge.
I've only ever seen one male up close for an instant and it was maybe the size of a juvenile female Shepherd. Females I've seen more often because they'll show themselves if you get in the area of a den with pups and they are nowhere near the size of an adult Shepherd.
they get that big in MI. weighed one in a couple years ago at 70 pounds.
Must be a steady supply of prey available. 70 lbs. would be just slightly light for an adult male Shepherd but within the normal weight range.
probably, where i got that one is 80acres private land, with lots of small rodents.
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