Skip to main content

Love hurts

A British woman had rather a nasty shock while taking her young child to see African wildlife at a safari park in the UK. An amorous male rhinoceros first sniffed at her car and then repeatedly bashed into it, apparently mistaking it for a female of the species. Around €693 (£500) worth of damage was caused to the car, a grey Mitsubishi Warrior pick-up truck, although the woman and her toddler were unharmed. Luckily her choice of vehicle gave her and her child some protection against the over-excited creatu
May 20, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A British woman had rather a nasty shock while taking her young child to see African wildlife at a safari park in the UK. An amorous male rhinoceros first sniffed at her car and then repeatedly bashed into it, apparently mistaking it for a female of the species. Around €693 (£500) worth of damage was caused to the car, a grey Mitsubishi Warrior pick-up truck, although the woman and her toddler were unharmed. Luckily her choice of vehicle gave her and her child some protection against the over-excited creature as a smaller car might not have proven so sturdy. The woman’s insurance claim is likely to provoke some speculation with a claims handler however. Just how the rhinoceros confused a pick-up truck with a female of the species is unclear. And what the animal’s behaviour says about entrenched sexist attitudes as well as the mating habits of the male rhinoceros is quite another matter.  Meanwhile at a game reserve in South Africa some American visitors had a shock when a female lion approached their vehicle and using its teeth on the handle, opened the car door. The driver hit the accelerator and left the animal behind, allowing the rear seat passenger to close the door again and make sure it was properly locked.

Related Content

  • Elephant impact
    March 27, 2014
    British holidaymarkers were lucky to avoid being killed when an elephant unexpectedly attacked their car. The pair were visiting the Kruger National Park in South Africa when their VW Polo car was first rammed and then flipped onto its roof by the enraged male elephant. One of the elephant’s tusks pierced the door of the car, seriously injuring the woman passenger and she was taken to hospital after the attack. She recovered from the injury however and was later able to leave after treatment.
  • Young driver
    February 9, 2017
    Police in South Carolina were called by a concerned woman who spotted a very young driver at the wheel of a vehicle early one morning. The toddler had decided to take his battery-operated toy car for a spin in the area around his home. Officers arrived on scene and tracked down the child after a short pursuit and then backtracked by following the wheel marks to his home. The parents were highly surprised at this turn of events, having put the child to bed rather earlier. They were advised by the police to s
  • Lion’s share
    September 11, 2015
    A number of visitors to South Africa’s famous Kruger National Park had a rather close-up view of a lion attacking an antelope recently. The drivers were sitting in their cars when a lion sprang at an antelope, tearing at its throat and killing the unfortunate animal almost instantly. This was photographed in graphic detail by the visitors, although some rather rashly opened their car windows so as to get a better view. Only a short time previously a visitor to the park was killed when a lion pounced through
  • Open door policy
    February 22, 2012
    In South Africa a baboon has paid the ultimate price for its thieving habits. The animal was caught by trappers and given a lethal injection. The animal's crime, or repeated crime, was to open the doors of cars at the game park where it lived, and steal items from unwary tourists. The baboon was caught on camera in the act of breaking into one vehicle during last year by British tourists and became an unlikely Robin Hood figure, stealing from the rich (tourists) to give to the poor (itself and its troop). T