Horse attacked by bear

WINCHESTER — Torringford Street resident Joanne Hunt had a scare on her property the morning of Saturday, June 26, when a suspected bear attack injured one of her horses.

Hunt said she was getting ready to go to a meeting Saturday at 8:15 a.m. when she noticed her horse, Jackie, lying down in her corral. “I said, ‘Jackie, what are you doing?’†Hunt recalled. “Then I noticed these big scratches — gouges on her butt, her rear-end. And she had a big, gaping hole on her leg. Finally she stood up and there was a big hole on the inside of her other thigh.â€

It appeared as if Jackie had been clawed by a powerful animal. Deep claw marks nearly a foot long had cut through her thick skin. “It looked like the bear actually grabbed a hold of her and bit her,†Hunt said.

Hunt immediately called Winsted Animal Control Officer Alicia Campbell and was visited by a representative from the state Department of Environmental Protection. The consensus was that Jackie’s injuries were the result of a bear attack.

Medical treatments for Jackie included pain killers and antibiotics, as horses are particularly susceptible to infections. Hunt said the horse is expected to recover fully, but she wants neighbors to know that bears are becoming more prevalent — and evidently more intrusive and aggressive — in the Winsted area.

“I had seen a bear outside our property last week,†Hunt said. “This one probably came into Jackie’s fenced-in area and she probably swung and kicked at it.â€

There have been 143 black bear sightings in Winchester during the last 12 months (June 30, 2009, to June 29, 2010), according to the DEP. Including the towns of Winsted, Barkhamsted Colebrook, New Hartford, Torrington and Norfolk, that number increases to 735 sightings, or more than a quarter of all sightings (2,888) throughout the state. During the past year, black bears have been spotted traveling through Winsted’s residential neighborhoods numerous times, indicating the bear population is growing and becoming more accustomed to developed areas.

Hunt said a friend of hers in Goshen had a goat killed by a bear and that she is worried there may be other attacks on her property. She has installed a bear trap outside Jackie’s fenced-in corral and is keeping an eye on the surrounding area. “If a bear is out there attacking horses in the neighborhood, people need to know about it,†she said. “This is horse country out here.â€

Bear sightings can be reported online at depdata.ct.gov/wildlife/sighting/bearrpt.htm, or call the DEP’s hotline at 860-675-8130.

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