Preparedness
Dad’s Heroic Fight Saves Son from Mountain Lion Attack

A California family experienced a terrifying ordeal during their Labor Day picnic when their 5-year-old son was attacked by a mountain lion. The incident occurred just before 4:30 p.m. on Sunday at the Tapia Day Use Area of Malibu State Creek Park in Calabasas, as reported by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office.
The boy’s family and several other adults and children were enjoying their time when the mountain lion suddenly grabbed the child by the head and began to run.
“Somebody screamed the baby’s name, and his dad started running,” the boy’s aunt recounted.
“The father grabbed the mountain lion with his hands, and he just fought. Then the mountain lion let go.”
The dramatic rescue unfolded in front of about 40 onlookers, some of whom noted that the mountain lion appeared completely unafraid during the attack.
Male mountain lions can weigh up to 150 pounds and measure up to 8 feet in length, making the father’s actions even more heroic.
The boy was promptly airlifted to Northridge Hospital Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries. He was released later that Sunday but had to return to the hospital on Monday due to complications involving his eyes.
Upon arrival at the scene, California State Park rangers and California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) officers found the mountain lion crouched in a tree near the picnic area.
The animal was deemed a threat to public safety and was euthanized by a ranger.
Wildlife officers collected evidence from the boy’s injuries, including DNA swabs from the bite marks, which were matched to the mountain lion.
“CDFW and State Park officials are thankful that the family is safe, and the child is recovering and no one else was injured,” the CDFW stated.
Watch a local news report about the incident below:
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Off The Grid
What Would You Do If the Grid Went Down Tomorrow?
How to Survive the First 24 Hours Without Electricity
Picture this: you wake up and nothing works. The lights don’t turn on. Your phone’s dead. The fridge hum is gone, and the tap only spits air. You check outside streetlights, silent houses, blank car alarms. It’s not just your house. The entire grid is down.
Sounds dramatic, right? But blackouts happen all the time, and most people are wildly unprepared for even a few hours without power. The key to surviving a real grid-down event isn’t stockpiling gadgets it’s knowing how to stay calm and use what you already have wisely.
Hour 1–3: Don’t Panic, Get Oriented
The first few hours are about awareness. Check your surroundings. Is it just your block or the entire city? Turn off and unplug major appliances to protect them from a surge when the power returns. Use your phone sparingly battery power becomes gold.
Start filling containers, bathtubs, and pots with water. When the grid fails, municipal pumps stop working fast. You’ll want every drop you can store.
Hour 4–8: Secure Light and Warmth
Once the sun starts dropping, light becomes your lifeline. Use flashlights, candles, or headlamps never burn open flames near flammable surfaces. If it’s cold, layer clothing and block drafts instead of wasting energy trying to heat a room. If it’s hot, stay hydrated and open shaded windows for airflow.
Now’s also the time to check on neighbors, especially anyone older or living alone. Community awareness is survival in disguise.
Hour 9–16: Protect Your Food and Water
Your fridge will stay cold for about four hours your freezer for about a day, if unopened. Group food together to preserve cold air and start eating perishables first. Keep bottled water handy, and if you have a gas or charcoal grill, that’s your new kitchen.
Stay inside if possible; confusion and panic can spread quickly outside when communication fails.
Hour 17–24: Rest and Reset
As night falls, light discipline matters. Too much brightness could attract attention if things get tense. Conserve power, stay quiet, and rest. Tomorrow, you’ll need clear thinking to find information, help, or supplies.
Grid-Down Checklist
✅ Store water before pressure drops
✅ Conserve phone battery
✅ Secure light and warmth
✅ Eat perishables first
✅ Check on neighbors
✅ Stay calm and rest
When the lights go out, the people who do best aren’t the ones with the most gear they’re the ones who keep their heads and think clearly. Preparation starts now, not when the power dies.
Nature and Wildlife
10 Survival Skills You Should Learn Before You Need Them
These Everyday Skills Could Save Your Life Or Someone Else’s
When an emergency hits, it’s too late to start Googling. Whether it’s a power outage, car breakdown, unexpected hike gone wrong, or full-scale disaster, knowing what to do before chaos strikes is the difference between staying calm and spiraling. The good news? You don’t need military training or a bug-out bunker. You just need to learn these 10 core survival skills ahead of time and they’ll serve you in everyday life too.
1. Fire-Starting Without a Lighter
Being able to start a fire in wet or windy conditions is a skill that spans thousands of years and it still matters. Learn to use a ferro rod, flint and steel, or even a magnifying glass. Practice with damp tinder, and always carry some dryer lint or cotton balls soaked in petroleum jelly.
2. Basic First Aid
Knowing how to stop bleeding, treat burns, or manage a broken bone is essential. Sign up for a CPR/first aid course you’ll gain life-saving knowledge and confidence. Bonus: it’s just as useful at a family BBQ as in a forest.
3. Navigation Without GPS
Batteries die. Satellites fail. Learn to read a paper map, use a compass, and find direction using the sun or stars. Even basic orienteering skills can get you out of a jam.
4. Knot-Tying for Real-World Use
The right knot can save your gear or your life. Know how to tie a bowline, square knot, and trucker’s hitch. These knots can help build shelter, secure loads, and make emergency repairs.
5. Water Purification and Collection
You can survive weeks without food but only 3 days without water. Learn how to boil, filter, or chemically treat water. Know where to find it in urban and wild environments, like rain catchment or condensation traps.
6. Shelter Building With Natural Materials
Even in a warm climate, exposure can be deadly. Practice building lean-tos, debris huts, or tarp shelters using branches, leaves, and cordage. A good shelter keeps you warm, dry, and protected from the elements.
7. Situational Awareness
Learn to scan your environment, trust your instincts, and notice small changes around you. Awareness prevents problems, whether it’s spotting a fire hazard, noticing someone following you, or avoiding dangerous terrain.
8. Cooking Without Electricity
Know how to cook over open flames, on a wood stove, or using solar ovens. It’s more than survival, it’s resilience. Start by learning to boil, grill, or bake without relying on modern conveniences.
9. Signaling for Help
If you’re stuck, you’ll need to be found. Learn how to use mirrors, flares, whistles, or even create large ground signals like “SOS” using rocks or logs. Understanding rescue priorities can make you easier to spot and faster to save.
10. Mental Resilience and Problem Solving
This is the quiet skill that holds it all together. Practice staying calm under pressure through breath control, visualization, or even journaling. In any crisis, your mindset determines whether you freeze… or adapt.
🧭 Final Thought
The best time to learn these survival skills is when you don’t need them. They aren’t just about extreme situations they teach self-reliance, confidence, and control. The more you know, the less you fear and the better prepared you’ll be when life throws the unexpected your way.
Nature and Wildlife
Everyday Items That Turn Into Life-Saving Tools
When disaster strikes, you don’t always have a survival kit, tactical knife, or fancy equipment on hand. But here’s the truth: most of what you need to stay alive might already be in your home, office, or even your pockets. Survival isn’t just about being tough it’s about being resourceful. And with a little creativity, ordinary objects can become extraordinary lifesavers.
1. Bandana – The Swiss Army Cloth
A simple bandana can do more than keep sweat off your neck. It can filter dirty water through layers of fabric, serve as a makeshift sling or bandage, and even protect your lungs from dust or smoke. Soak it in cool water to regulate your temperature, or use it as a flag to signal for help. If you don’t have one, a T-shirt or scarf can do the job.
2. Duct Tape – The Ultimate Fix-All
There’s a reason duct tape belongs in every emergency bag. It can patch holes in tents, mend broken shoes, and even seal wounds in a pinch (apply gauze first). Twist strips into rope or cord to build shelter or tie gear. It’s waterproof, strong, and takes up almost no space proof that survival is often about ingenuity, not gear.
3. Belt – From Fashion to Function
A sturdy belt can do more than hold up your jeans. In an emergency, it can become a tourniquet to slow bleeding, a strap to secure gear, or a way to climb or drag supplies. Leather belts also double as fire starters when scraped or used to create sparks with metal. Never underestimate what’s already wrapped around your waist.
4. Credit Card – Not for Shopping Anymore
That little piece of plastic can save your life in surprising ways. It can act as a scraper to remove ice, clean a wound, or smooth surfaces. In urban settings, it can even help unlock certain types of doors or windows in emergencies (though always within the law). It’s lightweight, flat, and unbreakable perfect for quick problem-solving.
5. Plastic Bottles – Hydration and Beyond
Plastic bottles can purify, store, and transport water. Cut the bottom off to make a funnel or plant container, or fill with water and leave in sunlight to disinfect it (solar disinfection works in about six hours of bright sun). Bottles can also serve as makeshift lanterns when filled with water and placed over a flashlight.
6. Trash Bags – Shelter in Disguise
A heavy-duty garbage bag is an unsung hero. With a few cuts, it becomes a rain poncho, sleeping bag liner, or emergency shelter. It can also collect rainwater or insulate against cold ground. Carry a few you’ll thank yourself later.
Final Thought
In a true emergency, the most valuable tool isn’t what’s in your hand it’s what’s in your head. Thinking creatively under pressure turns common items into life-saving gear. You don’t need to be a survivalist to survive; you just need to see the potential in what’s already around you.
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Tim
September 16, 2024 at 4:21 pm
IF We the People cannot defend ourselves from danger, we should be given a free liberal, animal rights activist or socialist to be the bait, target or funder of “our” bad decisions and threats put in our way, in socialist Amerika. Just like We the (working) People are today, for the lazy and inferior. Restore the republic, that Abe Lincoln destroyed 163 years ago. Defund the unGREATful SOCIETY and the Gestapo too.