Bearly news worthy...

Lots of reports of bears getting into garbage cans and loitering on people's lawns around here too. Fortunately, they're ordinary black bears, not the browns and grizzlies you have up in AK.

I've yet to see one here. Maybe I shouldn't say that.

Edit: just read the linked-to stories, looks like they were all black bears there too. Not so bad, more of a nuisance. Still, I'd not be too comfortable hiking the back country up there knowing there are more dangerous types lurking about.
 
About two weeks ago two people were killed in two days in two separate incidents by black bears in different parts of Alaska. Black bears aren't harmless.
 
I think you're more likely to encounter black bears by a large margin, but backed into a corner I'd rather face a black than a brown. Maybe part of the problem is guys will get up close with blacks. I have. No way I'm approaching a brownie without a gun.

The two fatalities were very unusual in that the bears went out of their way to attack humans. That is not normal. We have lots of bears around in south central this year. Mostly in the city where we can't shoot them. Nobody said bears are stupid!
 
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I didn't say they were harmless, just not usually AS dangerous. AFAIK black bears generally don't go after people to eat them, unlike grizzlies. I would still NOT want to get between a black bear and his dinner, or a mother and her cubs...

There might be rare exceptions to the above, but I think it's usually true. At least I hope so, since I live in black bear country.
 
I think you're more likely to encounter black bears by a large margin, but backed into a corner I'd rather face a black than a brown. Maybe part of the problem is guys will get up close with blacks.
Not sure about AK, but down in the lower 48 another part of the problem is people feeding them as if they were squirrels, getting them used to human habitations. At least the locals here seem to see them for the wild animals they are, and do everything they can to scare them away from civilization. Tourists, not so much...
 
I didn't say they were harmless, just not usually AS dangerous. AFAIK black bears generally don't go after people to eat them, unlike grizzlies. I would still NOT want to get between a black bear and his dinner, or a mother and her cubs...

There might be rare exceptions to the above, but I think it's usually true. At least I hope so, since I live in black bear country.

Grizzlies in general have learned that human contact means trouble, at least the Alaska ones, and usually will avoid trouble if possible. Black bears haven't learned that yet. I have met several grizzlies and so far all were peaceful meetings.

In Denali Park I did the stupid tourist thing accidently and surprised a black bear at close range. Fortunately, I was within a foot of one of those blue port-a-potties and I was able to barricade myself behind 1/16 of an inch of blue plastic. (and good thing it had toilette paper there....) After about 15-20 minutes I was brave enough to look outside and Mr. Bear was not insight.

But as with everything, there are exceptions. That individual bear may be just be having a bad day and then here comes a stupid two-legger....

To me, nothing like being alone in bear country and see claw marks 8-10 feet up a tree to remind me that I am not the top of the food chain here....
 
Another Juneau story.....

Posted June 30, 2017 12:43 pm - Updated June 30, 2017 03:35 pm
By
KEVIN GULLUFSEN
Juneau Empire
Bear attacks dogwalker near Dredge Lakes
3 Comments
2K Share
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A warning sign posted at the Dredge Lakes, Mendenhall River and Back Loop access Friday. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

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A warning sign posted off Glacier Spur Road where two state trooper vehicles were also parked. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

A man and his dog were attacked by a sow black bear defending its cubs early Friday morning, the Alaska Department of Fish & Game told the Empire on Friday afternoon.


Walking about 50 feet ahead of its owner on the Moraine Ecology Trail near the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center, the dog encountered a sow black bear with at least one cub, according to ADF&G biologist Tom Schumacher

The bear was chasing the unidentified man’s Rottweiler out of some brush when the bear approached the man. The incident was reported at 9:40 a.m., though it took place at 4:30 a.m. Friday.

The bear chased the dog back to its owner, who waved his arms and decided to sit down on the narrow trail instead of being knocked down by the bear. The bear climbed on top of the man, but it didn’t bite or scratch him.

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The dog, bear and man were not hurt, Schumacher said.

“He kicked at the bear, and the dog had come back and was barking and biting at the back end of the bear,” Schumacher said. After a short struggle, the bear then left the scene with at least one cub.

Schumacher characterized the attack as a defensive action by the bear, unlike recent fatal attacks by black bear near Anchorage.

“Unlike the situations up north, where black bears made predatory attacks on people, this appears to be a defensive situation where the bear thought the dog was threatening its cub, and the bear encountered the man who it also assumed was a threat,” Schumacher said. “Still, we don’t like it when bears behave this way toward people.”

USFS ranger John Neary said he does not believe the attacking bear was one of the bears that is normally seen near the Mendenhall Glacier Visitor Center.

All trails are closed in the Dredge Lakes area for the time being as ADF&G investigates. The USFS said they’re unsure when they will reopen the trails, but they’ll be closed at least until Saturday. Both the USFS and ADF&G swept the area for the bear Friday morning, but couldn’t locate the bear.

The man didn’t see any identifying characteristics like an ear tag, Schumacher said. The man described the bear as being about three times the size of his Rottweiler.

If they could identify the bear, Fish & Game would consider killing the bear if they determined it to be a continued threat to humans. There are at least four sows with cubs in the area, Schumacher said, and without any identifying characteristics, it will be hard to locate the bear.

Recent mild winters have been good to bears, allowing sows to reproduce in larger numbers than normal, Fish & Game said in a June press release.

“Generally bears that behave aggressively toward people are killed,” Schumacher said. “We don’t want to put a bear that’s a problem in one area, put it somewhere else and have it cause a problem.”

Bears in the Mendenhall Glacier Recreation Area are “highly prized for viewing” Schumacher said, and Fish & Game has a “big hurdle” in identifying the bear. He suspects it’s unlikely they will be able to properly identify and locate the aggressive bear.

“If we can’t do that, there’s no need to make a decision,” on whether to kill the bear, Schumacher said.

This is the first time in about a decade that Fish & Game has received a report of a bear making contact with a human, ADF&G’s Ryan Scott said.

“It’s extremely rare. We’ve had to go back in our records and pinpoint the last time we were aware of something like this happening,” Scott said. “But as some who has been a wildlife manager for the last 12 years, it has been at least seven or eight years making contact with a person locally.”

In that case, Scott said, a man was feeding bears out of his hand. When the man ran out of food, the bear swatted his hand. Fish & Game didn’t learn about this incident until months after it happened.

Neary said the USFS cautions people all the time to use leashes when walking on Forest Service trails, as going without one can significantly increase the risk of provoking a bear.

Correction: An earlier version of this story stated that the man had been knocked over by the bear. He had actually sat down before the bear climbed on top of him.



• Contact reporter Kevin Gullufsen at 523-2228 or kevin.gullufsen@juneauempire.com




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A *predatory* attack by a black bear is indeed a scary thought. I've yet to hear of a case like that in New England though.

Odd that the article didn't go into more detail about what might make a black bear see a human as potential food.
 
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