Posts Tagged ‘bears’

“Sierra Wave: Visitor Shoots Bear in The Lakes Basin”

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

This article made me mad. The guy had the time and opportunity to get to his vehicle, get his firearm, and go BACK to the bear to shoot it in the head from 40 to 45 feet– how was he in imminent danger? And f he did feel so threatened by a bear simply eating his snacks, why didn’t he just drive away? People!

I hope the authorities that responded throw every available book at him.

“A Fed Bear Is a Dead Bear”

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

People really can be stupid, can’t they? This post proves it yet again.

Wake-Up Call!

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

bear

I’m hoping this was Photoshopped. It must have been– who would grab a camera before the bear spray? Anyway, I’ve seen it online several times now with no explanation, so I can’t pass one along.

Yellow-Yellow– Not Your A-ver-age Bear…

Friday, July 31st, 2009

NORTH ELBA, N.Y. — It was built to be impenetrable, from its “super rugged transparent polycarbonate housing” to its intricate double-tabbed lid that would keep campers’ food in and bears’ paws out.

The BearVault 500 withstood the ravages of the test bears at the Folsom City Zoo in California. It has stymied mighty grizzlies weighing up to 1,000 pounds in the backcountry of Yellowstone National Park.

But in one corner of the Adirondacks, campers started to notice that the BearVault, a popular canister designed to keep food and other necessities safe, was being compromised. First through circumstantial evidence, then from witness reports, it became clear that in most cases, the conqueror was a relatively tiny, extremely shy middle-aged black bear named Yellow-Yellow.

Some canisters fail in the testing stage when large bears are able to rip off the lid. But wildlife officials say that Yellow-Yellow, a 125-pound bear named for two yellow ear tags that help wildlife officials keep tabs on her, has managed to systematically decipher a complex locking system that confounds even some campers.

In the process, she has emerged as a near-mythical creature in the High Peaks region of the northeastern Adirondacks.

“She’s quite talented,” said Jamie Hogan, owner of BearVault, based in San Diego. “I’m an engineer, and if one genius bear can do it, sooner or later there might be two genius bears. We’re trying to work on a new design that we can hopefully test on her.”

His company and New York’s Department of Environmental Conservation have cautioned campers in the Adirondacks against using the BearVault because of its vulnerability here. There have been no reports of the BearVault being regularly broken into anywhere else in the country.

Bears and campers do not usually interact, and when they do it is usually over food.

Four years ago, New York State began requiring overnight campers to use bear canisters in the eastern High Peaks, a sublime wilderness favored by backpackers and black bears alike. Several national parks, including Yosemite, also require canisters.

Before they used canisters, campers often stored food in bags, typically hung from cables slung between trees, which inadvertently made for one-stop shopping for bears.

“They had learned that when they saw a bag in the air, there had to be a rope someplace and they learned to bite or slice the line,” said Neil Woodworth, executive director of the Adirondack Mountain Club, a conservation and recreation group.

The number of “negative human-bear interactions,” according to the Department of Environmental Conservation — mainly incidents in which bears approached people looking for food — dropped to 61 last year in the eastern High Peaks from 374 in 2005. But, of course, there was a problem with the solution.

BearVaults, one of several canister brands, are favored by many backpackers because they are light and can be opened with bare hands; most others require a coin or screwdriver. Like other brands, BearVaults must pass the zoo test, in which bears are given a certain amount of time to try to break into a canister filled with food.

Similar to a childproof medicine bottle, the BearVault 350 and 400 models can be opened by pressing a tab that allows the camper to screw off the lid. But reports began coming in from campers a few years ago that BearVaults were being broken into. State wildlife officials began suspecting Yellow-Yellow, one of a number of bears they have tagged and tracked as a way of studying the behavior of the more than 5,000 bears roaming the Adirondacks.

In most BearVault break-ins, Yellow-Yellow’s radio collar indicated she had been in the area. Eventually, campers began spotting her from afar rifling canisters. There have been no reports of her threatening anyone.

So last year Mr. Hogan introduced the 450, a two-pound cylinder costing about $60, and a larger version, the 500, each with a second tab. On them, a camper must press in one tab, turn the lid partway, then press the second tab to remove the lid. “We thought, ‘O.K., well, one bump didn’t work so maybe two bumps will thwart her,’ ” he said.

But Yellow-Yellow figured that lid out, too.

Last month, her achievements were noted in an article in Adirondack Explorer. And she now appears to have apprentices; campers have reported seeing other bears getting into their BearVaults.

“Yellow-Yellow seems to be the most adept at defeating it,” said David Winchell, a spokesman for the Department of Environmental Conservation’s Region 5, which covers the High Peaks. “Certainly, she is the most commonly observed in the area when it’s happening.”

It is not certain exactly how Yellow-Yellow plundered campers’ Italian sausages and granola bars, but she apparently depresses one tab with her teeth, turns the lid, uses her teeth on the second tab, and then opens it. At the Adirondack Mountain Club’s High Peaks Information Center here, where campers can rent canisters, an example of a defeated BearVault is on display: a bear’s teeth have left deep gouges in the hard plastic lid, as though it were putty.

“I don’t think she’s twisting it with her paws,” said Chuck Bruha of the Mountaineer, a camping-goods store in nearby Keene Valley. “We think she’s biting the lid and twisting her whole head.”

Ben Tabor, a state wildlife technician who has tracked Yellow-Yellow, said the evidence on the canister supports that theory. (He watched her tackle a BearVault two years ago, although he was too far away to determine her method. ) He doubts, however, that she has out-of-the-ordinary intelligence. “I don’t think she’s smarter than most bears,” he said. “I think she’s had more time to learn.”

Mr. Tabor emphasized that Yellow-Yellow, while tenacious with the BearVaults, is shy around people; she runs from them. He worries that her prowess could lead to pressure to kill her. In 2006, the agency had to kill a 350-pound black bear that had cornered campers with food inside their lean-tos, although no one was hurt. “It would be ridiculous for us to remove Yellow-Yellow at this point,” Mr. Tabor said. “She’s not bold. She doesn’t charge. She steals food but runs away when confronted.”

Mr. Hogan is working on a prototype of a new model, the 550, for next year. State officials have agreed to test it by filling it with aromatic food and depositing it on Yellow-Yellow’s turf. “She’s the whole reason we’re doing this,” he said.

“Camping, Cold, and Closeness”

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

The real moral of  this story is what happened to the poor bear. “Stupid people” is right!

A Real Treat of a Bear Story by Robynn

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

This is a series of three posts and an epilogue (written by the dog, the unsung hero of the piece). Start here and, with writing like this, you won’t be able to stop:

“Now the statement, “There are bears in the car” is not a sentence I had ever considered forming or hearing. So I had never presupposed my response. I did, however, immediately know it did not include staying where I was. I don’t tend to run away from things that scare me anyway; I run toward them because being scared just makes me spitting mad. And I had children to protect.

And Cheetos. And Hostess Ding Dongs.

What I wasn’t prepared for was what I saw next…….”

Just scroll down past the comments and click on “Newer Post” to get to the next installment. You won’t be sorry.

“World’s Shortest Camping Trip” by Paulius

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

This blog post is as good a picture as you’re likely to get of trying to camp in summer in South Carolina. Heat, bugs, a bear, and a pretty good attitude all add up to one funny story here. I like Paulius’ style; he writes of his wife’s head snapping around at every new sound “like a Daschund’s after a thrown sausage.” He tells of “Oh my God my teeth are melting” heat. And yet, he says, they considered their trip a success: “We got out of the house, had a nice picnic in the woods and learned that we don’t like to camp in 100 degree heat in bug infested hell-holes.”

See? Every tent camping trip is a chance to learn more about yourselves and your surroundings– and I hereby deem Paulius and Sunny Campers of the Year in the Willing to Try It Again category!

Guns to Be Allowed in National Parks

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

I can’t think of a single logical, sound reason to have a gun among the s’mores ingredients and hand sanitizer when camping, can you? I’ve been mulling this over ever since reading this article, “Camping? Pack Some Heat, Baby” by Carl Hiaasen. I’m a fan of the Constitution, although no member of the NRA, so I’m not interested in sparking some generic gun-rights battle here in my blog– I’m just concerned about people carrying in National Parks! Camping is fraught with enough pressures– what if it rains all weekend? What if little Jimmy drops his marshmallow into the flames and goes in after it? What if Suzy gets lost and was wearing her camo sundress so she blends into the environment? Do we really need to add, as Hiaasen sarcastically suggests, what if “the drunks at the next campsite might be fooling around with a loaded .357?”

Hunting, of course, is illegal in National Parks. Protecting yourself from wildlife gone– well, wild– with firearms isn’t encouraged, either. (If you’re going to shoot at the bear going for your cooler, you’d better be a damned good aim, or you’ll have a hungry AND furious critter to contend with.) Encouraging your camping neighbors to observe quiet time after 10:00 with a gun probably would be frowned upon, also, at least by said neighbors. And what good could come of a situation in which they answered with their own heat?

Read Hiaasen’s article, and if you have a rebuttal, by all means, comment here. I’d love some answers to all those questions this new law to allow loaded guns– even concealed weapons, with appropriate state permits– in National Parks raises. What does it accomplish? Who does it benefit?

Befuddled and incredulous,

I remain,

Jean B. in SC

Big Critters at Camp– Bear-Proof Coolers

Saturday, June 6th, 2009


There are two companies that have managed to produce grizzly-proof coolers of a decent– even very large– size (small containers have been available for years), and State and National Parks are beginning to approve of their use. In an article by Susan Gallagher in The Huffington Post dated 5/28, it’s reported that “a group called the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee, which includes representatives from U.S. and Canadian wildlife agencies and from the states of Montana, Wyoming, Idaho and Washington” has tested coolers manufactured by Yeti Coolers and Engel USA and that these coolers do not have to be strung up in trees, etc., because they are tamper-proof. (The photo is provided by the Living With Wildlife Foundation.) Please note, however, that you still have to follow park regulations wherever you may be camping, and that not all park systems are aware of these new designs’ capabilities yet.

These coolers tend to be pricey, but if you’re in bear country, could well be worth every last penny. They are made of the same material as high-tech plastic kayaks, so are also light-weight and keep cold things cold for extended periods, nice qualities in any cooler! Mind you, the bears could easily still smell the food in them, so keep them well away from your tents, people– they just couldn’t GET to the food inside. Here is an example of one of Yeti’s bear-proof coolers:

Dutch Oven Cooking and Bears

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Bears are not a problem here in the lowcountry of South Carolina, so we don’t have to concern ourselves with attracting them through the smell of food; considering that it’s even suggested to store the clothing worn while preparing food in bear-safe containers away from a tent, though, is dutch oven cooking a good idea in bear country? I doubt it. Part of the charm of cooking in dutch ovens is the delicious aroma that entices as the food slow-cooks…

Anybody out there have a definitive answer?

We aren’t lucky enough to be planning a trip too far from home this summer, but I’m still curious.