The tourist was walking with his grandson through the Bridge
Bay campground, south of Fishing Bridge, when he was attacked by the
bison.
The National Park Service (NPS), which administers
Yellowstone, has not released details about the attack.
But Mike MacLeod, a professional photographer from nearby
Bozeman, Montana, gave a vivid account of it to Wyoming’s Cowboy State
Daily newspaper. He also provided video of the attack to the outlet.
MacLeod told the outlet that he was camping at a campground
with his wife when she spotted the bison approaching the area.
“I was just trying to get some dramatic footage of that
bison having a fit,” MacLeod said. “It’s changed my idea of what to expect from
these guys at this time of year, because I would not have predicted that
happening.”
MacLeod said the bison “started walking through the
campground. He was coming up to this group of kids, who were taking pictures on
their cellphones from a good distance away, and then the buffalo charged these
kids.”
MacLeod said the bison kept running through the campground
while campers yelled and screamed to warn each other.
The man who would be tossed into the air then appeared
coming down a road while the animal was sitting in dust.
“He was sitting in the dust, like bison do, with his head
out towards the road,” MacLeod said.
MacLeod’s video shows the grandfather and grandson each pull
cellphone cameras out and point it at the bison while standing dozens of yards
away.
However, the animal started to get up.
At that point, MacLeod reported to Cowboy State Daily: “The
grandfather’s like, ‘OK, time to leave,’ and they moved off behind these
trees.”
The animal was distracted by a pickup truck and charged it,
prompting the vehicle’s driver to speed off.
“The guy in the truck saw that happening, and he just kept going,” said
MacLeod, who added that the bison then turned his attention to where the man
and his grandson “were hiding in the trees”.
The grandson managed to flee while the bison chased his
grandfather around some trees and flipped him, MacLeod told Cowboy State
Daily.
“The bison hooked him with his left horn on his hip and
tossed him in the air,” he said to the outlet. “He made a perfect flip and
landed on his side.
“The bison was at least 6ft tall, and the victim was several feet above him.”
MacLeod said he tried to distract the bison: “I was really
afraid he was going to gore the guy on the ground, so I stopped videotaping and
ran at the bison, yelled loud, and was trying to be as big and intimidating as
possible.”
Other bystanders did the same, and the bison fled.
MacLeod said the wounded man’s grandson told him that the
grandfather “has some pretty significant injuries and is not out of the woods
yet”.
Yellowstone officials warns on the park’s website that the
animals in the park “are wild and dangerous, no matter how docile they may
appear to be” and the best way to view them is from inside a car.
Officials advise visitors to stay at least 100 yards (90
meters) away from bears, wolves and cougars, and a minimum of 25 yards away
from all other animals, including bison and elk.
“If an animal moves closer to you, back away to maintain a
safe distance,” the park’s website says. “It’s illegal to willfully remain near
or approach wildlife, including birds, within any distance that disturbs or
displaces the animal.”
MacLeod pointed out that the injured man was following park
suggestions when he was attacked. “I didn’t see anybody getting close,” MacLeod
said to Cowboy State Daily. “People were yelling, ‘Careful, there’s a bison
coming through,’ and they kept their distance. They were very
respectful.”
The attack happened during bison rutting – or mating –
season, when the males seek to show off their physical prowess and stamina in a
contest for mating with a bison cow.
“You can tell he was agitated, pissed off and charging
anything and everything,” MacLeod said.
Cowboy State Daily reported this is Yellowstone’s second
bison-on-human incident in 2026. The first occurred on 26 June, when a
12-year-old was injured near Mud Volcano, north of Fishing Bridge.
“The visitor sustained injuries, and emergency medical
personnel transported them to a nearby hospital,” the NPS said in a
statement. “The incident remains under investigation.”


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