By Nate Eaton, EastIdahoNews.com | Posted - May 15, 2016 at 9:28 a.m.

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Yellowstone — We've heard a lot about tourists trying to touch wildlife at Yellowstone National Park, but this story takes personal encounters with animals a bit further.

Karen Richardson of Victor, Idaho was one of several parents chaperoning a group of fifth graders on a field trip to Yellowstone this week.

Richardson said on Monday, as students were being taught at Lamar Buffalo Ranch, a father and son pulled up at the ranger station with a bison calf in their SUV.

"They were demanding to speak with a ranger," Richardson told EastIdahoNews.com. "They were seriously worried that the calf was freezing and dying."

Rob Heusevelet, a father of a student, told the men to remove the bison from their car and warned they could be in trouble for having the animal.

"They didn't care," Heusevelet said. "They sincerely thought they were doing a service and helping that calf by trying to save it from the cold."

Law enforcement rangers were called and the father and son tourists, who were from another country, were ticketed.

Heusevelet said the rangers followed the pair back to where they had picked up the bison and the animal was released.

Yellowstone visitors are not allowed to approach wildlife and are to stay at least 25 yards away large animals, according to the National Park Service website.

The school group returned from their trip Friday and Richardson posted a photo of the bison on Facebook with the caption: "Dear tourists: the bison calf is not cold and it is not lost. PUT IT BACK!"

No doubt the National Park Service would agree with that statement.

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