Two women in Colorado were injured over the weekend when they were attacked by a moose, KETK-TV reported.
Jackqueline Boron and Ellen Marie Divis were walking their dogs when the frightening incident happened in Black Hawk, according to the Gilpin County Sheriff's Office.
"All of a sudden, I looked up and he was looking right at me and grunted and then charged," Boron told KDVR-TV. "I tried to get up, and he kept coming back and stomping on me."
"When I fell back he got me here," Boron said, pointing to her arm. "Then, when I curled up forward, that's when he got me on the head."
The brutal attack left Boron with staples in the back of her head, 15 stitches on her leg, and four broken ribs.
While Divis was briefly stomped on by the moose, she was able to escape and get help.
"I heard 'help me, help me, help me,'" neighbor Chris Hockley told KDVR-TV. "This lady comes running up to her house and she's covered in blood."
Following the attack, the sheriff's office issued a warning to residents.
"If you encounter a moose: walk away from it -- DO NOT walk towards it; moose are agitated by dogs; make sure your dog is on a leash, control the dog(s) and walk away," the warning statement said.
Also this weekend, a woman in Alaska was attacked by a bear on a military base.
The unidentified woman suffered cuts to her neck, arms, and legs. A passerby eventually noticed her and took the woman to the base hospital. Shortly after, she was transported to an Anchorage facility.
"It was very quick, and she didn't remember much," Maj. Angela Webb said of the attack and what the woman could remember.