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Appears in Newsflare picks
00:49
Conservationist climbs tree to escape rhino woken up from being tranquilised
This is the terrifying moment an angry black rhino trapped conservations in a tree with their feet barely centimetres away from the animal's horn.
Tom Frew from Ranger Buck Safaris joined an operation to locate and collar white rhinos in South Africa in September 2021 when they received a call that a rare black bull was nearby.
Having sedated and collared the young bull, 26-year-old marketing manager Tom was forced to jump into a tiny tree nearby to evade the charging giant.
Perched precariously in a skinny branch just above the rhino's nose, Tom and a colleague had to stand deadly still until the infuriated bull finally ran off.
Tom, from Cape Town, South Africa, said: "I was just thrilled and so full of adrenaline from the encounter.
"It all just happened so fast that it was already over before we could even start to comprehend what had just happened and how lucky we were that things ended the way that they did.
"African black rhinos are rarer than the white rhinos and are much more aggressive and dangerous as well, especially when provoked or aggravated.
"Sure enough, as soon as the rhino came to, it caught the scent of my colleagues in the surrounding trees and rushed around furiously from tree to tree trying to even the odds with us after having ruined its morning.
"With the rhino so fixated on everyone else, I hadn't even bothered to start climbing the tree next to me and was still standing on the ground videoing the commotion with my phone.
"After what seemed like a lifetime, the animal finally gave up the chase and made its way back into the bush and we were left unscathed after what could have easily ended as another unusual African death statistic.
"We stayed in the tree for a few minutes after the animal disappeared just to be safe before finally making our way down and back towards the safety of the vehicles and continued with the rest of the collaring operation."
Ranger Buck Safaris works with multiple organisations throughout South Africa to protect wildlife by offering clients the opportunity to join real conservation work.
Tom said: "When black rhinos wake up after these procedures, they almost always choose fight instead of flight and often put on an incredible show, rushing around and charging at anything they can.
"If you manage to find a strong, sturdy tree, more often than not, they come right underneath you to try and get some payback.
"All of a sudden and completely out of nowhere, the rhino stopped dead in its tracks, turned towards us and started hurling itself in our direction at breakneck speed.
"I was immediately filled with crippling regret when I turned around to get my first proper glimpse of the tree we had chosen in case of a rhino attack.
"It had a trunk not much thicker than my thigh and two lousy, low-hanging branches that were just high enough to keep us out of reach from the rhino.
"Out of time and with no other options, I figured that this was my best bet and rushed to join my colleague who was perched on one of the branches no more than 1.5metres above the ground.
"In a matter of seconds, I had reached the highest possible point I could climb without the risk of breaking a branch and tumbling out of the tree where the rhino was now waiting below, huffing and puffing furiously and trying to figure out how it could get to us.
"All that needed to happen was for the rhino to put even a little bit of its weight against the flimsy trunk and that would have been enough to send the whole tree toppling over with us inside of it.
"With less than half a metre between us and the animal and nowhere else to go, all we could do was stay as still as possible and hope that the animal would eventually lose interest.
"We weren't in the tree for more than three minutes. We had to wait there for a bit to be sure that the animal was in fact gone before we climbed down."
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