Where animals eat you
At these destinations, one misstep and you're dinner
After barely surviving a lion attack, explorer David Livingstone wrote one of the most vivid descriptions of what it’s like to have the jaws of death literally clamped around your neck, an animal bent on munching you like so many corn chips. The lion “caught me by the shoulder as he sprang, and we both came to the ground together. Growling horribly close to my ear, [the lion] shook me as a terrier dog does a rat. The shock ... caused a dreaminess, in which there was no sense of pain nor feeling of terror, though quite conscious of all that was happening.”
Livingstone survived his frightening encounter, but many others have not been so lucky — the hundreds of people around the world who perish from wild animal attacks each year. Despite mankind’s much ballyhooed “conquest” of Planet Earth, there are an awful lot of things out there still waiting to pounce — and an ever-increasing number of adrenaline junkies bent on getting as close to these creatures as possible and (hopefully) living to tell about it.
Ironically, the most deadly members of the animal kingdom are not those that inspire the most fear. Mosquitoes are responsible for more human deaths each year than all other creatures combined. And, of course, there are snakes — many different poison serpents that inflict suffering and death.
“Most African safari guides say that buffalo are the most dangerous animals because they are easily startled and their first instinct is to charge,” says Matt Kareus of Colorado-based Natural Habitat Adventures, which organizes wildlife safaris all around the globe. “Most also say though that nothing is more lethal than getting between a hippo and its water at night. And many of our Alaska guides say moose are more dangerous than bears. A lot depends on circumstance and the likelihood of an encounter in the first place.”
But it’s the things that might actually digest us, that seem to frighten people the most. “Lions and tigers and bears,” as Dorothy once chanted. And for good reason — those three species account for a good number of human attacks and deaths each year. Oh my, indeed.
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Guamanchi Expeditions, Merida The anaconda isn't a man-eater per se, but more of an opportunist who will dine on anything living that happens to come its way. Although its modus operandi is constriction, you are more likely to drown as the reptile drags you into whatever swamp or stream it calls home. |
Why is it that people crave such close contact with deadly creatures?
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Aditya Singh / The Ranthambhore Although exact figures are hard to come by, it’s estimated that as many as a hundred people each year succumb to tiger attacks in India, Nepal and Bangladesh. The greatest killer of all time – the Champawat man-eater – dispatched more than 430 people in the early 20th century. |
There are any number of ways to rub shoulders with beasts that can do you harm. Sometimes it can be very close to home — last year, a suburban California mountain biker was attacked and killed by a cougar not far from Disneyland. But generally you will have to venture into the wilderness, and in some cases the ends of the Earth, where the wildest animals are more likely to dwell these days, far away from the world’s most deadly species — homo sapiens. Click here for some ways to see them in safety and style (and without harassing or provoking the animals).
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