Canadian woman, 44, is mauled to death by black bear outside family cabin
Canadian woman, 44, is mauled to death by a black bear while on phone to her father outside family cabin while her nine-year-old son watched from inside
- Stephanie Blais, 44, was killed on Thursday after she was attacked by the black bear outside the cabin at McKie Lake, near Buffalo Narrows
- Blais had been on the phone with her father, Hubert Esquirol, at the time of the attack
- Her nine-year-old son watched horrifically from inside the cabin
- A conservation officer said that the bear attack was unprovoked
- They also said the bear was not hungry and had a stomach full of berries
By Matthew Wright For Dailymail.com
Published: 13:28 EDT, 25 August 2020 | Updated: 14:59 EDT, 25 August 2020
A Canadian woman was fatally mauled by a bear while outside her family’s cabin while on the phone with her father, and to the horror of her young son who was just inside when the attack occurred.
Stephanie Blais, 44, was killed on Thursday after she was attacked by the black bear outside the cabin at McKie Lake, near Buffalo Narrows, CKOM reports.
At the time of the mauling, the Saskatchewan woman was on the phone with her father.
‘Stephanie and I were talking over her satellite phone,’ her father, Hubert Esquirol, said.
Stephanie Blais was at the cabin with her family at a cabin in Saskatchewan when she was brutally mauled by a black bear
‘She called me to tell me that the waterline hadn’t been working and that her husband had fixed it. She then told her son, Eli, to run inside and grab an antenna.’
Those were the last words he heard his daughter speak. He soon heard distorted gurgling sounds.
‘I stayed on the line for a few minutes before I hung up and tried calling again,’ he said. ‘The sounds were very disturbing. An attack crossed my mind but attacks are one in a million.’
Blais’ husband, Curtis, called the worried father back less than 10 minutes later.
She was on the phone with her father when the bear attack. Her nine-year-old son watched from inside the cabin (pictured)
‘He called me and told me that Stephanie had been attacked by a bear. The bear wouldn’t let go so he shot the bear until it let go,’ Esquirol said.
‘He then proceeded to give her CPR but she had no pulse.’
Eli, Blais’ nine-year-old son, saw the horrific scene from inside the cabin.
Blais was described as having a ‘zeal for life next to no one else’
The woman’s father was surprised by the attack as bears have always been around the property but have never presented a problem before.
‘We never leave any food around, we have never given them a reason to stay. There has never been any provoked bears or any that seemed angry. They would always run off,’ he said.
Esquirol had just been at the cabin a week before his daughter had her trip.
A conservation officer told the father that the bear was unprovoked in its attack.
‘Stephanie would have been in the bears’ sight. She had her back turned. She didn’t see it,’ Esquirol said.
The bear’s stomach was found full of berries leading the officer to believe that the bear was not hungry.
‘Curtis handled the situation extremely well,’ Esquirol said. ‘It could have been so much worse. The children could have been near her at the time of the attack.’
A GoFundMe has been launched for Curtis and the children. It has raised close to $40,000.
‘Our Stephanie had a zeal for life next to no one else. She was the most loving and passionate mother, who always spoke of how blessed she was to be able to be home and raise her children,’ her cousin, Jane Rusbridge, said in the post.
‘These were her most precious days. She was free spirited, and loved the earth. She shared this with anyone who crossed her path. Her joy, passion, love, compassion, wisdom and selflessness was felt by anyone who had the joy of meeting Stephanie.’
A conservation officer said that the bear attack was unprovoked. The officer also said that bear had a stomach full of berries (file image)