The offical BIg Balls Story!

thenerdguy

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Darn!

Dr. Eric Fortier, 34, used a pocket knife to attack a polar bear on Canada's Baffin Island, just south of the Arctic Circle, to save two friends who were being mauled.

Fortier, an orthodontist, first encountered the bear in July 2001 when he felt what he thought was a dog leaning on his tent wall.

"My first thought was to push it away," he said. "A few seconds later my girlfriend saw the shadow of a bear's paw through the tent fly and then it started ripping through the ceiling."

The two screamed to frighten the bear and warn their friends in a tent several yards away, but the bear ripped into that tent and began mauling 31-year-old Alain Parenteau.

"Their screams changed," Fortier said. "I grabbed my glasses and my knife and unzipped my tent and headed out."

The bear dwarfed the 6-foot-1 Parenteau, knocking him to the ground, he said.

Fortier threw a large rock at the bear, distracting it and allowing Parenteau to escape, but it then turned on 25-year-old Patricia Doyon, who was in the same tent. Again Fortier threw rocks at the bear and again its target was able to escape.

"The bear gave chase and I gave chase," he said. "At some point, Patricia tripped or the bear tripped her and was at her back. I was beside the bear's head and I stabbed it with an upper cut below the jaw in the neck a couple of times."

The bear ran off. While there was some fur and blood on the 3 1/2-inch blade, Fortier said he doesn't think he hurt the bear badly. Both Parenteau and Doyon, however, were bleeding badly.

Fortier and his girlfriend lashed two canoes together and paddled five miles along the Soper River. Fortier traveled another two miles by foot to seek help in the nearest settlement.

Both Parenteau and Doyon were airlifted to a hospital and survived, though Parenteau had a gash within a centimeter of his jugular, Fortier said.

The bronze medal is given to people who "risk their lives to an extraordinary degree while saving or attempting to save the lives of others."

Industrialist Andrew Carnegie started a hero fund in 1904 after being inspired by rescue stories from a mine disaster that killed 181 people. The award comes with a $3,500 grant.

Two of those given the award Monday died while trying to rescue others.

Jamie L. Inman, 24, of Pellville, Ky., died after passing her 10-year-old stepdaughter and 1-year-old son through a window to save them from a mobile home fire on Feb. 8, 2002.

Inman was found inside the home beside the body of her 3-year-old daughter.
 
i thought the protocol was to play dead when a bear comes along? anyway, that was pretty brave of him to scream like a girl while stabbing him in the face. that's what i would've done anyway.

EDIT: i've just seen your sig...ahahaha Armed & Dangerous is pretty hilarious no? i thought the actual game was a bit cack, more effort went into the cutscenes, "give me the keys!" "what?" "give me the keys!!!" "he wants a kiss?" bahahahahaha
 
Aye, really brave...

I would have stabbed the bear in the back, thats what i would have done.
 
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