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BE ALERT IN BEAR COUNTRY!
- Always have pepper spray in its holster ready for
immediate use. Don’t bury it in your pack.
- Be alert where recent bear activity has been documented by park officials,
Fish and Game, Forest Service, and other public service people. Some common
areas where bears like to frequent are: avalanche chutes, stream beds, dense
edge cover and, in late summer, berry patches.
- Use extreme caution when traveling on trails at night or at either end of day.
- Be careful with food smells - never cook close to camp. Store all foods in
plastic away from camp at night and when camp is unattended. We suggest at least
100 yards from camp and at least 14 feet up a tree hung 4 feet away from the
trunk.
- Watch for fresh bear sign (scat or bear tracks) on the trail or near possible
camp sites.
- If possible, make plenty of noise on the trail, especially on blind curves, in
dense vegetation or areas with limited vision.
- Be conscious of the wind - bears have an excellent sense of smell. If the wind
is at your back, chances are a bear will smell you and leave the area well
before you reach it. If the wind is blowing in your face, your chances of an
encounter greatly increase. Also, in high wind situations or along creeks and
streams, a bear might not hear you coming or you might not hear it.
- Dead animal carcass - If you come upon a dead animal carcass, immediately
leave the area. Bears will often feed on a carcass for days and also stay in the
area to protect their food.
- Bear cubs - If you see a bear cub, chances are the sow is not far away. Female
bears will fiercely defend their young, so it is best you leave the area and
find an alternative route.
- Keep dogs under control - dogs can lead an angry bear back to you.
- We advise not to travel alone in bear country. Invite a friend. It is always
safer to travel in groups if possible.
AVOID PRIME BEAR HABITAT
Avoid areas that bears like and you can reduce your chances of an encounter.
If you can’t avoid these areas, be extra cautious and alert when traveling
through them. Bears like to travel on saddles, ridges, game trails and along
water. They’ll eat dead animal carcasses wherever they can find them. They feed
on green grasses and also vegetation that grows in wet areas. They often rest in
cool, dark, thick forests. Grizzly bears are typically, but not exclusively
active during the dawn, dusk, and nighttime hours.
In spring and early summer, bears are often found in lower elevations along
rivers and streams. They love to catch fish when the spawning runs are going.
They will also search for winter killed animals in these areas.
In the summer, bears usually spend time at higher elevations, often in park like
areas. They’ll eat wild berries when they are ripe. If you like to go out wild
berry picking, be extra careful, make lots of noise and keep children near you
at all times.
In the fall, bears are often found in whitebark pine stands eating pine nuts.
Sometimes a bear will dig around a tree to try to locate a squirrels cache of
nuts. Bears also dig for roots in mid-elevation meadows, especially in years
when there are fewer pine nuts.
BE AWARE OF RECENT GRIZZLY BEAR ACTIVITY
Always check with park officials, rangers, or other authorities regarding the
area you intend to travel for possible bear activity. Always make sure others
know where you are going to be in the back country. Learn to identify the signs
of bear activity and avoid using these areas. Typical signs of grizzly bear use
include: fresh tracks (a grizzlies claw marks extend farther away from pads than
black bears), scat greater than 2 inches in diameter (most likely a grizzly's),
areas where the ground may be tore up from bears scavenging, and partially
consumed or buried animal carcasses.
BEAR BEHAVIOR Bears seem to experience moods much like we do; they can be shy, curious, pushy,
or aggressive, and can possess other attributes that we can identify as
humanlike. Each time you get close to a bear, you encounter a specific
individual that may behave differently from any other individual you have ever
met before or will ever meet again.
Grizzly attack victims are often not aware of why they were attacked. Many
attacks are caused by close encounters, where the bear has been surprised and
feels threatened by human presence. A female with cubs will be especially
aggressive and will defend her cubs from any possible threat. Many attacks can
be avoided if the bear sees a way out of the situation.
Bears are basically solitary animals. Each has its zone of danger, or personal
space, which varies from animal to animal. If something or someone penetrates
this zone, a response in the form of a bluff charge, bodily contact, or outright
attack may result. Often times grizzly bears will essentially ignore people
until a person enters enters into a bear's "personal space". Even groups as
large as 100 people have been ignored by grizzly bears until one of the group
gets too close. Most bears are timid enough to flee a possible encounter if they
sense the presence of something or someone soon enough to leave the area
undetected. On the other hand, when a bear is surprised, the bear may see you as
a threat, forcing an immediate response.
A person who runs when frightened by a bear may trigger a chase response. One
bear will even chase another if it runs. Bears that stand their ground when
confronted by other bears usually aren’t attacked, and bears that behave
submissively have a lower incidence of being attacked as well. A grizzly bear
rarely wants to kill a human. Considering the damage a grizzly is capable of
inflicting on a human, wounds resulting from bear attacks are often nothing more
than superficial bites, scrapes, and lacerations. The evidence is very clear
that grizzlies do no t try to kill a human as a result of a close encounter,
they simply try to remove a perceived threat. The injuries that occur are more a
function of what the human does to resist, rather than what the bear is capable
of doing. Of course, a grizzly entering a tent represents a predatory event
which is behaviorally very different than a close encounter situation.
Young grizzlies can pose another danger. Often these bears have just left their
mother and rank low on the hierarchical scale. Larger, more dominant bears often
push these juveniles into marginal habitat. To survive, young bears do a lot of
exploring. If these bears start using campgrounds as foraging areas, they may
quickly become dangerous to people camping in them. In extremely rare instances,
young grizzlies will even key onto people as potential prey. Black bears seem to
rely more on sheer bluffing than on charging and mauling. Those rare instances
in which a black bear presses an attack can probably be grouped into two
categories: First, a female protecting her cubs, particularly if she is also
habituated and food-conditioned; or second, a bear that has no experience with
humans and may regard them as possible prey.
BODY LANGUAGE OF BEARS A bear that stands on its hind feet is
usually just trying to get a better look and smell by sniffing the air. This is
not an aggressive posture in of itself. It simply means that the bear is unsure
of what is in front of him, but still could drop on all fours and charge. A bear
that swings its head from side to side, or turns sideways from you, is
expressing a reluctance to charge and is looking for a way out of the situation.
If a bear looks you in the eyes directly and has its ears back, it’s warning
that you are too close and feels threatened. A bear may also make barking,
woofing or moaning sounds to indicate this.
If a bear "pops" its jaws, it is very agitated and most often will charge.
Charges are often a test to resolve a situation and are often "bluff charges"
where the bear stops short of you, veers off and runs right past you. A bear
might bluff charge many times before leaving. A bear may also bluff charge a few
times and then come at you at a different angle. A bear that does charge, and
knocks you down, is attempting to remove a threat. The bear will use as much
force as it believes is necessary to remove that threat. A bear can instantly
reach speeds of 30 to 35 miles per hour in a matter of a split second. Never try
to outrun a bear, it will only make matters worse.
BEAR ENCOUNTERS ON THE TRAIL
- Stop, stay calm and quiet, and make no sudden moves.
- Break eye contact - do not stare in the bear’s eyes, as this is a sign of
aggression.
- Stand your ground - do not turn your back on the bear - sometimes a bear will
bluff charge several times. Have your Pepper Spray ready,
but do not spray unless you are sure the bear is close enough to spray in the
face.
- Look for signs of agitation and aggression - When a bear is standing on its
hind legs, it is usually just trying to get a better look and smell of you. When
a bear is upset it may have it’s ears back- it may lower it’s head and swing it
from side to side- it may paw at the ground- it may make huffing or woofing
noises- it may snap it’s teeth- or not show any signs at all, and just drop and
charge with no warning.
- Back away slowly, speaking in a calming, monotone voice - you want to show the
bear that you are being submissive and want to get out of "It’s" territory. Do
not turn your back and always have your Pepper Power ready.
- If the bear comes at you - spray the Pepper Spray aiming
for the bear’s face or spray a fog out that the bear has to run through to get
to you.
Being close to a sow with cubs is always a dangerous situation.
- Keep a cool head - Try to stay calm, do not yell or scream.
- Some bears, even grizzlies, will climb trees after you. Also a grizzly can
reach 10 feet up a tree while standing on the ground.
- Right before a grizzly bear makes contact in a surprise attack at close range
(and you don’t have pepper spray), roll into a ball or lie face down, try to
protect your neck an face, and pray. Don't stick your arm out, kick, scream, or
fight. Try to protect the vulnerable parts of your body while remaining as still
as possible, this will actively be helping the bear remove the perceived threat.
Surprising a territorial male bear or a sow with cubs will almost always be a
threatening situation.
- Some bears, mostly young bears unfamiliar with the dangers of human contact,
have been known to actually stalk humans. If you believe this is the situation
you are in, and have not just surprised the bear, it is recommended that you
defend yourself aggressively.
- If the bear mauls you continuously, despite yourself being passive, you may
have to fight back. Try using any available weapon - a knife, rock, fist - and
concentrate on hitting the bear’s head, eyes and nostrils.
BEAR ENCOUNTERS IN CAMP The situation of a bear that enters your camp is to be handled differently than
a bear surprised on the trail. They might not have any fear of humans and have
probably become used to eating human food and garbage. These bears are
dangerous, and are no longer fearful of being in close proximity to humans. Make
sure that you store your food properly. A bear that finds no food in camp is
more likely to become disinterested and move on to better pickings.
Try to remain calm, avoid making direct eye contact and speak softly to the
bear. If the bear is within 10 to 15 feet, spray the bear with your pepper spray. If it is safe to do so, try slowly backing out of the
area while looking for suitable trees to climb. Make sure you have enough time
to climb a tree before attempting it. Make sure you can be up the tree at least
14 feet before the bear reaches you. Climb as high as you can and stay there
until the bear is gone. Be aware that some grizzlies can climb trees and all
black bears can.
If you are attacked by a bear in camp, it may be a predatory attack or could
also just be a bear seeing your camp as it's food source. The bear may have made
a conscious choice to attack you, or may see you as a threat to it's food
supply. Playing dead may not work depending on the situation. Spray the bear
with your pepper spray. Fight the attack by punching,
slapping or using any object available as a weapon. Try to evade the bear by
climbing up a tree or onto a boulder.
Sleep in tents large enough to stack gear between you and the tent wall. If a
bear gets within 10 to 15 feet of your tent, or attempts to enter it, spray the
bear with your pepper spray and fight back.
Report the
incident as soon as possible, even if the bear simply walks through the camp. We
do not recommend that you remain in that particular campsite another night.
IF A BEAR COMES INTO YOUR CAMP AT NIGHT
Get your Spray ready, and then, look out of the tent and
check out the bear with your flash light. First, make sure it’s a bear, not one
of your hiking partners or other harmless animal wandering in the night.
If you can identify it as a black bear, the situation is usually not as serious
as a grizzly coming into camp. Spray the bear if it is within 10 to 15 feet with
your pepper spray.
This will not permanently harm the bear
but will let it know that it is an unwelcome guest and it will probably not
return. If you have time to get to your escape tree, do it, but don’t leave the
tent if you aren’t sure you have time. If the bear (black or grizzly) is hanging
around the cooking area because of the food smell, make lots of noise and try to
scare the bear away.
IF A BEAR COMES INTO YOUR TENT
This is the worst possible situation. It very rarely happens, but there are a
few documented cases. An at night attack usually comes from a predatory bear. If
you act like prey, you become prey.
Once more, don’t panic, run, or scream, but don’t remain calm. Instead, fight
back with everything you have. Don’t lie still in your sleeping bag. Don’t play
dead. Use the pepper spray.
Make loud metallic noise. Use an
air horn. Shine lights in the bears eyes. Temporarily blind the bear with the
flash of your camera. Use any deterrent you brought with you. Unload on the bear
with everything you have. Anything goes. Use whatever physical resistance you
can.
WHAT CAUSES A BEAR TO ATTACK?
Bears attack other bears, other animals, and people because they have
genetically programmed types of aggressive behaviors that pertain to population
regulation, survival defense, and predatory aggression. This doesn't mean that
there aren't other factors involved in some attacks, or that people don't
contribute to some attacks. Though we have established the fact that bears are
unpredictable, there are four situations that are most likely to cause a bear to
attack. By knowing what they are we can work to avoid getting into these types
of situations.
- When a person encounters a protective sow with cubs. An
average of 78% of all attacks are related to these encounters.
- When a bear is
surprised, or startled.
- When a human gets too close to a bear's food supply.
- Predatory Bear (When the bear intends to eat you).
Regardless of the situation, surprise is one of the leading causes of bear
attacks. A surly solitary bear, who is startled by a hiker on a trail, may run
away or aggressively confront the hiker. Most injury encounters with bears occur
when the person gets within 55 yards before the bear is aware of his presence.
WHAT ABOUT HUNTING IN GRIZZLY COUNTRY?
Sportsmen, who harvest big game animals in grizzly country, should be
aware that the sound of a gun shot might sound like a dinner bell to a wandering
grizzly. Some hunters, tracking down their "trophy elk", can be quite surprised
when they find a grizzly has beat them to it. Hunters who make a kill in grizzly
country should make lots of noise as they carefully approach the carcass. They
should also try to view the carcass from a distance to see if a grizzly is
guarding it. The blood and gore at a kill site may attract a keen-nosed,
opportunistic grizzly. Many hunters who have killed animals and returned the
next morning to pack out the meat, have been suddenly confronted by an
aggressive bear who had claimed the kill overnight. If a kill site appears
disturbed, but no bear is seen, it’s best to back off because the bear may be
lying in cover nearby. A bear on a kill may refuse to back off, even when shots
are fired into the ground nearby, and many sportsmen have been forced to
relinquish their harvested game animal to a protective bear guarding its food
supply. Smart sportsmen who harvest big game animals in grizzly country try to
pack out the meat the same day of the kill, or they carry the quartered carcass
to a safe spot a few hundred yards from the bloody kill site and then hang the
quarters high in a tree.
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