Hero Husky Mauls Charging Bear SAVES Kid!

The family husky launched onto a charging bear’s back and steered it away from a six-year-old.

Story Snapshot

  • Security video shows a dog bite and chase a bear away from a child.
  • The owner says the husky often places herself between strangers and the kids.
  • A wildlife official said the dog “worked out perfectly” in this case.
  • The chase continued off the property after the first hit on the bear.

A driveway, a sprinting bear, and a split-second decision

Home security video from Torrington, Connecticut, shows a black shape close in on a boy in a driveway. A husky flashes into the frame, leaps onto the bear’s back, and bites. The bear wheels and runs. The dog keeps after it, driving the animal away from the child and the home. The clip is short, but the action is clear. The boy is within feet of the bear before the dog meets the threat head-on.

Coverage of the clip matches what viewers see at full speed. Reports say the dog bit the bear and chased it off. The video ends with the husky still pursuing down the street, tail high, intent on the retreating bear. The clear on-screen turn from charge to flight explains why the public latched onto the “hero dog” label. People respond to proof, and this proof lasts only seconds, but it is unmistakable.

What the owner and a wildlife official say

Owner Jeff Tazzara backed up what the video suggests. He said the husky “always puts herself…in between strangers and the kids,” a pattern that fits what happened in the driveway. A state wildlife expert, Jason Hawley, added a sober note. He said the dog “worked out perfectly in that situation,” but also warned that results like this are not guaranteed and urged families to contain dogs around bears. That mix—praise with caution—sounds right.

Reports differ on the bear’s age, and the video itself does not prove if it was a cub or an adult. No medical records for the child or the dog have been made public. The clip also starts and ends fast, so we do not see what led the bear there, or what happened a minute later. These gaps do not erase what the camera shows, but they limit sweeping claims. Responsible readers can hold two ideas: the dog saved a boy, and more context would still help.

How to read the video without losing common sense

The video is powerful because the action is simple. A predator moves toward a child. A protector counters with speed and force. The bear flees. That sequence is why many outlets ran the story without pushback. No credible counter-story has surfaced to say the child was safe all along or that the dog misread the moment. The clearest contested point is not if the dog intervened, but how rare or repeatable that outcome may be in other homes.

Policy guidance points the other way from the dog’s charge. Agencies and safety groups tell people to stay calm, keep dogs leashed, and give bears escape routes. They warn that dogs can make bear incidents worse if a chase turns and the bear stands its ground. One New Jersey “BearWise” bulletin found dogs were part of more than half of black bear incidents with people in a five-year span, and almost half of those dogs were hurt. Advice like that does not cancel this win; it frames the risk.

What this means for families in bear country

Parents in places like Connecticut, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania now deal with bears at the trash can and the mailbox. That reality argues for simple habits. Secure food and garbage. Check the yard before letting kids or pets out. Keep dogs leashed off property and under voice control at home. If you do meet a bear, back away slowly, talk in a calm voice, and give it room to leave. Do not corner it. Do not turn a standoff into a chase if you can help it.

Conservatives value personal duty, family protection, and respect for wildlife. This story threads all three. The dog acted on pack loyalty and saved a child. The owner praised her but did not claim this is a plan. The wildlife official warned against gambling on heroics next time. That balance is the lesson: applaud the husky, and then harden the home so your family never needs a four-legged linebacker to bail you out again.

Sources:

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