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SAFETY IN BEAR COUNTRY
Back to Bear Viewing
...Sometimes in spite of our good intentions we have
unwanted encounters with bears.
...BE PREPARED.
Plan how you are going to react when you meet
an inquisitive, intelligent, and potentially dangerous animal in the
backcountry--or in your neighborhood.
..BE PREDICTABLE. Many bears in Alaska have had interactions
with people. As our population increases this number will grow. What
a bear learns in one encounter influences what it does in the next.
Try to make every encounter positive-for you and the bear. If we
want bears to be non-threatening and predictable, it is important
that we reciprocate. BE CAREFUL. Bears don't like to be surprised.
If you are hiking in a place where you can't see, make your presence
known by talking or clapping your hands. If you are hunting you will
probably be walking very quietly. Move slowly and be especially
alert.
...TRAVEL WITH A GROUP. While this isn't always practical,
the larger the group the smaller the risk of attack. Groups of
people seem to intimidate bears. Bears are more likely to approach
one or two people than larger groups. Keep close together. Being
strung out along a trail creates many groups of one.
...DON'T APPROACH BEARS . Moving towards a bear is aggressive
behavior-it forces the bear to react. If you inadvertently approach
a bear and feel the bear is not aware of your presence, take
advantage of the situation and slowly move away. Carefully watch to
make sure the bear is not following.
...A BEAR MAY APPROACH YOU FOR DIFFERENT REASONS. It might be
habituated or used to people and simply walking by at a distance it
is comfortable with. The bear may be curious. You may be on its
trail. You may be in the bear's personal space, and it feels
threatened. It may want your food. A female bear may perceive you as
a threat to her cubs. A bear may want to dominate you and, in
extremely rare circumstances, investigate you as potential prey.
MAKING EYE CONTACT WITH A BEAR IS UNLIKELY TO INFLUENCE THE BEAR OR
TO AFFECT THE OUTCOME OF AN ENCOUNTER. It is important to keep the
bear in sight so that you give yourself the opportunity to detect
important visual clues to the bears behavior.
...KEEP CALM. If a bear approaches, keep calm. It is
assessing the situation as it moves towards you. It's picking up
clues as fast as you are giving them. If you get excited, the bear
could too. It may change from being curious to being frightened. A
mother with cubs may change from defensively keeping you away, to
becoming highly stressed and going on the offensive-attacking in a
punishing display.
...IDENTIFY YOURSELF AS HUMAN AND DON'T RUN. If a bear
becomes increasingly stressed and aggressive, talk to it in a low
voice. DON'T RUN. Bears can go about 35 mph--even the fat ones!
INCREASE YOUR DISTANCE. Bears avoid antagonistic encounters by
moving away from one another. If the bear is not moving towards you,
very cautiously try to move away. If your movement causes the bear
to move towards you, stop and hold your ground. When you do this you
are using body language to say, "don't mess with me."
...BEARS MAY COME QUITE CLOSE. Bears may come close as they
threaten and decide what to do. If we behave correctly, identifying
ourselves, standing our ground, or giving the bear room, the bear
will make the right decision-sometimes not as quickly as we would
like--and move off. IF A BEAR PERSISTS... and continues towards
you--hold your ground. The bear is interested in you or something
you have, and may cause you bodily harm. Yell and wave your arms or
anything handy. You are trying to tell the bear you are not
intimidated. Groups of people should stand shoulder to shoulder to
project a larger presence.
...MOST CHARGES STOP SHORT OF CONTACT IF YOU REACT APPROPRIATELY. A head down, open-mouthed, running charge is a bear's trump card. It
is a defensive reaction to a perceived threat. The bear is telling
you that it is highly stressed and you are in the wrong place.
Charges happen so quickly there isn't much time for reaction. A
charge almost always ends short of contact.
...IF A BEAR ATTACKS... If, and only if, a bear makes physical contact,
fall to the ground on your stomach and protect your face and neck.
If the bear rolls you over, try to get back into this position. The
bear is almost certainly making a defensive attack and will stop
when it feels it has eliminated any threat. When the bear stops,
keep as still and quiet as possible. Stay that way until you believe
the bear has left the area. Movement and sound can initiate new
attacks. If the attack persists and the bear continues to bite long
after you assume a defensive posture, it is likely making a
predatory attack. Fight back vigorously.
...IF YOU CAN POSITIVELY IDENTIFY THE BEAR AS A BLACK BEAR... Do not
drop to the ground. Fight back as if your life depends on it-at this
point it may. You are almost certainly involved in a predatory
attack and the bear is trying to kill you. Try to focus your attack
on the bear's eyes and nose.
IF A BEAR OF EITHER SPECIES ATTACKS YOU IN YOUR TENT FIGHT BACK!
Taken from the book
Living In Harmony With Bears
A project of the Alaska Audubon Society
Author Derek Stonorov
Courtesy of Emerald Air Service
Bear Viewing
Bear Viewing Etiquette
About Bears
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