ckent323
Senior Member
Bill D,
Did you have food or eat in your tent? Bears have a highly developed sense of smell.
Relative to Bears, the sight and/or smell of food trumps urine and pretty much any other deterrent. I strongly recommend not to eat or take food in your tent or (horror) in your sleeping bag in Bear country.
Nothing like an oversize burrito for a nice wilderness dinner. ;-)
Here is some advice I was given by Park Service Bear experts (Biologists):
avoid direct eye contact.
Walk nearly parallel but slightly angling away from the animal and do so in a non-threatening "I'm just looking around here I am no threat" manner.
If attacked by a Black Bear fight for your life and do not play dead - else be eaten.
However, for a Grizzly Bear do not fight or run - cover your vital areas by curling up in a ball and play dead.
As you learned once a Black Bear locks on to something they want, it takes a fight to fend them off .
I have seen a Black Bear walk right into a campground, with many people banging pots and waving arms (instead of rapidly putting food away in a secure bear box), and go right past them to the food on tables etc. This is because the Bear had obviously learned the people will back off and the Bear can get to the food. Once they have the food it is theirs and no amount of rock throwing or pot banging will change that outcome but could cause the bear to attack.
They are very smart and nimble - I cannot stress that enough.
I suppose that is enough on this.
Regards,
Craig
Did you have food or eat in your tent? Bears have a highly developed sense of smell.
Relative to Bears, the sight and/or smell of food trumps urine and pretty much any other deterrent. I strongly recommend not to eat or take food in your tent or (horror) in your sleeping bag in Bear country.
Nothing like an oversize burrito for a nice wilderness dinner. ;-)
Here is some advice I was given by Park Service Bear experts (Biologists):
avoid direct eye contact.
Walk nearly parallel but slightly angling away from the animal and do so in a non-threatening "I'm just looking around here I am no threat" manner.
If attacked by a Black Bear fight for your life and do not play dead - else be eaten.
However, for a Grizzly Bear do not fight or run - cover your vital areas by curling up in a ball and play dead.
As you learned once a Black Bear locks on to something they want, it takes a fight to fend them off .
I have seen a Black Bear walk right into a campground, with many people banging pots and waving arms (instead of rapidly putting food away in a secure bear box), and go right past them to the food on tables etc. This is because the Bear had obviously learned the people will back off and the Bear can get to the food. Once they have the food it is theirs and no amount of rock throwing or pot banging will change that outcome but could cause the bear to attack.
They are very smart and nimble - I cannot stress that enough.
I suppose that is enough on this.
Regards,
Craig