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Alaska bears paying price for human encounters

Posted: June 6th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – The 2010 bear season is here, and so far the bears are paying the price for encounters with humans in the Anchorage area.

On Friday, an Eagle River homeowner killed a young black bear that sneaked into a chicken coop and killed a bird. This occurred hours after a different bear “mouthed” the leg of a girl at a neighborhood playground near Elmendorf Air Force Base.

The Alaska Department of Fish and Game says so far six young bears have been shot in the municipality of Anchorage – most of them in Eagle River – over roughly the past two weeks.

The attack on the chicken occurred at about 10 p.m. Friday, as George Drummond sat dozing in front of the television at his home. A neighbor banged on his door and told him there was a bear in his coop.

Drummond, 62, looked outside to see a 150-pound black bear eating his favorite chicken, an Araucana named Goldie.

Drummond said he picked up a garden hose, set it on “jet” and sprayed.

“I was squirting it in the head and the face, and it just looked at me,” he said.

He then fired his tiny .25-caliber handgun four times into the ground to scare the animal away. The bear moved toward his neighbor, Drummond said.

“It kind of made an advance towards him. So he gave it a couple shots with the .45,” he said.

Dying, the bear crossed the road where Drummond said he killed it with two more gun shots from the .25.

A ranger also shot a black bear at the Eagle River Nature Center on Friday, said Department of Fish and Game area biologist Greg Sinnott. “It was trying to get in all the doors and couldn't be driven away.”

A black bear also reportedly walked up to four girls at a playground in the Moose Crossing military housing between Elmendorf Air Force Base and Fort Richardson, said Elmendorf Deputy Public Affairs Officer Stephen Lee.

“Three of them, I'm told, hit the ground, to kind of just play dead,” Lee said.

The fourth girl stood and talked to the bear, “Trying to make herself as big as possible to scare the bear away,” he said.

The bear, which looked to be about 3 years old, approached one of the girls who was laying down and “mouthed” her leg, Lee said.

The girl screamed and the bear split, running for the woods.

The girl had a mark on her leg but no puncture wounds.

Military wildlife agents searched for the animal but couldn't find it, Lee said.

Playing dead is normally considered a last resort and isn’t a good idea with all bears, said Valerie Connor, conservation director for the Alaska Center for the Environment.

The theory is if attacked by a black bear, fight back, but curl into a ball and protect your neck from brown bears.

via Fairbanks Daily News-Miner – Alaska bears paying price for human encounters.


Ontario Bear Attack Victim tells his story

Posted: May 25th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

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Sounds just terrible. Surprising to see a black bear involved in such a ferocious attack.

Gerald Marois heard the bear before he saw it.

“I turned around and he was about 50 feet away — one of the biggest bears I had ever seen in my life.

“He looked at me and moved sideways a bit, I start backing up and he just charged me. He came full blast, man.”

Marois, 47, a retired steelworker and experienced hunter from Waubaushene, was mauled by a large black bear last Tuesday evening in a remote wooded area about 30 km northwest of Orillia.

He was airlifted to Sunnybrook hospital, where he gave the Star an exclusive and terrifying account of his near-death encounter.

Marois was planting a food plot in a small clearing about 150 feet inside the bush line, where he planned to hunt deer in the fall — “My Dad taught me that’s where you get the big buck” — when the bear came up from behind him.

“His head was huge, his eyes were really far apart from each other and he had tiny, tiny ears, which is the sign of a huge boar — probably 600 pounds.”

When the bear charged, Marois said he turned around and ran toward a nearby oak tree — “The one I wanted to put my tree-stand in” — and climbed three-quarters of the way up.

The bear followed him up.

Marois shakes as he tells the story from his hospital bed, his arms, legs and face covered in deep gashes.

Marois said he tried to fight the bear off from the trees upper branches, but it kept coming up after him.

“I was hitting him on the nose and on the head, trying to hurt him, and every time I hit him he was scraping me and just pulling on my boots.”

The bear pulled one of his boots off and started biting the bottom of his feet.

“Then he dragged me almost to the ground.”

Marois tried and tried to get away from the bear by climbing farther up the tree, but the bear repeatedly dragged him down.

“I was kicking him with the other boot and he grabbed that boot and he ripped it right off.”

The bear then tried to rip off Marois’s chest waders.

“That was messing him up, because they were coming back like an elastic, eh? And it was hard for him to rip them off.”

But the bear eventually got them.

“Then he started eating my flesh.”

Marois said he watched as the bear started eating into his right calf.

“He was eating my meat and he was licking the blood and licking himself and just enjoying every bite of it.

Marois suffered his worst injuries to his legs, which required a skin graft to repair. They look torn apart and scrawny when he lifts up his hospital gown.

“He ate my whole calf.”

Marois says he made at least 10 attempts to climb away from the bear and it kept coming after him.

“I was trying to get away from him in every direction that I could in that oak tree, but he kept on dragging me down; he wanted me down on the ground.”

Marois, who said he forgot his bear spray at home, then turned to the only weapon he had.

“I got my lighter out” — a regular cigarette lighter — “and I started burning his face.”

Marois said when he shoved the lighter in the bear’s face it clawed him in the head.

“And that was it with the lighter, eh? No more lighters.”

Proof of the bear’s swipe comes in the two long rows of stitches on the top and side of Marois’s head.

“I got really weak from that hit. I had barely nothing left, so I told God I was putting my life in his hands.”

He said he prayed to God to send his guardian angel to protect him, because he couldn’t fight the bear off any longer.

At that moment, the bear threw Marois from the tree — Marois figures about 20 feet — and he landed with a thud and a loud groan.

When he looked up he watched the bear dive out of the tree in the opposite direction.

“It seemed like God scare him, man. People don’t believe in God, but I’m telling you, man, something scare him. Because he got scared, he jumped in the rough and he took off.”

Marois said the attack definitely lasted more than 15 minutes, though he says it “felt like forever.”

But he knew he still wasn’t safe.

He heard the bear roaming around him, gnashing his teeth and making a guttural barking noise Marois called a “bawl” — the same noise it made before charging at him.

“I was sure I was dead. I told God, ‘Keep your hand over me, protect me.’”

Marois called his wife and then 911, but the rescue team and emergency crews couldn’t find him in the thick bush.

It took rescuers — with the help of Marois’ wife, Louise Beauchamp — more than an hour to find him. All the while Marois could hear the bear nearby.

Eventually the rescuers found him, and with Marois’s legs ripped to shreds, they moved him to a clearing where the air ambulance helicopter could land.

“That’s when I finally could breathe.”

The next thing Marois remembers is waking up in the hospital.

Marois’ health has been improving every day, but doctors tell him he may need plastic surgery to fix his legs. He says he has nightmares about the attack every time he sleeps.“It’s extremely hard for me to rest.”

Though he sometimes struggles to tell the story, Marois speaks angrily about the cancellation of the spring bear hunt in Ontario more than 10 years ago.

“I want (Premier Dalton McGuinty) to reconsider the spring bear hunt, so this doesn’t happen no more.”

Mike Harris’s provincial government ended the spring bear hunt in 1999 after it had been in place for 30 years. Critics called the spring hunt “barbaric” because it often left behind thousands of orphaned cubs. All other Canadian provinces with bears have spring hunts except Nova Scotia. Ontario still has a fall bear hunt, which starts in September.

A spokesman for Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources said Friday that they thought the bear may have mistaken Marois — bent over and wearing chest waders — as a deer.

But Marois believes the bear was tracking him.

“He didn’t mistake me for nothing. That bear wanted to maul me; he was hungry and he came to get me.”

The ministry says bear encounters are not on the rise in the province, but Marois says he and his neighbours have seen different.

“We live up north, the bear are coming in our town, in our kids’ schoolyard. They walk the streets with their babies.

“I want the population of Toronto to be aware that they’re not scared of us. They roam the forest and if they’re hungry, they’ll get you, man. There’s nothing you can do about it.”

Marois said his rescuers — a combination of OPP officers, paramedics and Port Severn firefighters — risked their lives entering the bush the way they did, not knowing if the bear was still in the area.

“I want to thank them from the bottom of my heart.”

Marois, who has been living in the Waubaushene area for more than 20 years, comes from a hunting family in rural Quebec.

“I was born with a rabbit snare and a pellet gun in my hands.”

But now he says he may never hunt again.

“It will be really hard to go back in the bush after this.”


Man attacked by Black Bear in Canada

Posted: May 21st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

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A black bear attacked a man in the popular Muskoka region Tuesday night, leading to a massive hunt for the animal before cottagers head north for the long weekend. At approximately 6:30 p.m., a 47-year-old man was attacked near Severn Township, just northwest of Orillia, in a forest frequented by hikers and horseback riders. The victim sustained injuries to his right arm and deep lacerations on both legs. He was taken to Toronto’s Sunnybrook Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. A large bite on his calf indicates the bear is mature, according to police.


Black Bear Attacks Elderly Hunter in California

Posted: October 18th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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SIERRA COUNTY, Calif. — An elderly hunter from Oroville was apparently attacked and seriously mauled by a black bear in Sierra County, the state Department of Fish and Game said.
Mark Lucero of Fish and Game said someone shot the animal near Camptonville, causing the bear to come down from a tree and charge Orval Sanders, 83, of Oroville.

Lucero said the bear grabbed the Sanders while the man tried to protect himself. He suffered lacerations and his left wrist was broken from a bite.

After the bear attacked Sanders, he went after another hunter. That hunter shot the bear in the head and killed it.

Sanders was taken to Sutter Roseville Medical Center, where Fish and Game officials were interviewing him.

The six-person hunting party was using dogs at the time of the attack.

Fish and Game officials plan to retrieve the head the bear to test it for rabies. Officials said when there’s an interaction between a human and a wild animal, wardens investigate the case.

Bear hunting season begins in early October and lasts until the allotted number of bears is killed, Lucero said.

The hunting was legal, officials said.

Fish and Game said bear-hunting season is Sept. 26 through Nov. 1, or until the bear tags are used up. Officials said there are 1,700 issued for California, and 303 bears have been killed so far.


Black Bear Attacks Elderly Man in Utah

Posted: September 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , | No Comments »

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A 78-year-old man was hospitalized Friday with injuries he received when he was attacked by a black bear in a remote area of eastern Utah.

The bear was shot and killed by another camper.

About 12:30 a.m., a river-rafting party of 13 people, including nine family members and four guides, were sleeping after finding a spot off the Green River near Rock Creek Ranch in Carbon County’s Desolation Canyon to stop for the night, said Brad Crompton, Division of Wildlife Resources’ southeastern region wildlife biologist. The family was awakened upon hearing the sound of a bear attacking a family member who had been sleeping on a cot, he said.

One of the victim’s daughters jumped on the bear and hit it with her fists, according to a statement from the DWR. After another family member joined in the struggle the bear let go of the man at which point the bear was shot in the back by one of the victim’s grandsons. The animal ran off and was found dead after sunrise.

The man’s torso was punctured and his arms scratched, the DWR said. A medical helicopter flew the man to a hospital about 4 a.m., and an airplane returned later in the morning to fly out the rest of the family.

“He seemed to be doing very well,” DWR spokesman Mark Hadley said of the latest update on the man’s condition, which was last reported to be stable.

Several hours before the attack, between 6 and 6:30 p.m. Thursday, the bear first appeared in the camp area but was scared off after a shot was fired into the air, the DWR said.

The victim, along with the other campers, had stored all of their food well away from the sleeping area.

“He was doing everything correctly,” Crompton said.

The man’s name and hometown were not released.

Most of the time, a bear can simply be scared away, Crompton said. If campers encounter an aggressive bear, they should report it as soon as they can to the DWR. Other safety tips can be found atwww.wildlife.utah.gov/bearsafety.

The bear encounter was the latest in a string of incidents this year.

In August, roads leading to campgrounds in the area of the Ute Fire Lookout in the Ashley National Forest’s Flaming Gorge Ranger District were closed due to black-bear activity.

In July, a young black bear was killed after wandering into Balsam campground in Hobble Creek Canyon.


Tennessee Woman Attacked by Bear

Posted: June 22nd, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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BLACK MOUNTAIN — A Black Mountain woman suffered minor injuries trying to get her dog away from a bear and two cubs that wandered into her yard Sunday, wildlife officials said.

Gaynell Lumsden was in her garage at Great Aspen Lane when the bears came into her yard about 8:30 p.m. Her small dog went after the bears, and when Lumsden tried to get her dog away, she was swatted by the mother bear.

Lumsden was treated at Mission Hospital and released late Sunday. Her dog, which was also slapped by the bear, did not suffer major injuries, officials said.

“I would not call it a bear attack, but a bear incident,” said Mike Carraway, a wildlife biologist with the North Carolina Wildlife Commission.

“It was just a mother bear defending her cubs. If it had been the bear taking aggressive action, the injuries would have been much more serious. The bear was defending its space is my take,” Carraway said.

Mother bears are not necessarily more dangerous than others, but they can be more aggressively defensive when their cubs are small at this time of year. “Later in the summer, when the cubs can run faster and climb, the mothers won’t be so protective,” Carraway said.

Bears also react instinctively to dogs, even small ones barking at them. “Dogs and bears don’t mix well,” he said.

Bears are commonly seen around the neighborhood outside Black Mountain, which was developed next to the pristine Asheville Watershed, according to neighbor Lyon Williams. “We’ve had bears break into houses. You can’t have a low-hanging bird feeder or a trash can out on the street. We have trash containers that we have to chain up.”

Bear incidents or sightings have exploded from 1993 when only 13 complaints were received around Asheville and the counties west of Buncombe, Haywood and Madison. In 2008, the commission received 302 bear reports from that district.

“This has been a fairly normal year” so far in 2009, Carraway said.

More sightings occur as more developments are built around the mountains. Humans moving into the mountains don’t necessarily chase animals away, but have actually led to an increase in the bear population since hunting is prohibited near the new homes, Carraway said. “You have all this little bear sanctuaries popping up,” he said.

In 2005, there were 4,000 bears estimated to live in Western North Carolina, according to the N.C. Wildlife Commission.

State wildlife officials can’t trap nuisance bears and relocate them, Carraway said. “We have nowhere to put them. We have Asheville city officials ask if we can’t take the bears and dump them up in the Asheville Watershed, but the watershed is saturated with bears. They would just come back down on Montreat and neighborhoods like this one.”

Warren Wilson College public safety officers issued an email alert last week, warning of an increase of bear sightings around campus and for students and staff to take precautions, said Ben Anderson, a college spokesman. “We always have some sightings during the summer, but we’re definitely seeing an increase.”


California’s Wild Animal Site

Posted: May 20th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, boars, bobcats, coyotes, mountain lions, wildlife | Tags: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

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Great site with very useful information about wild animals in California. Here’s an excerpt about Mountain Lions.

You may be attracting mountain lions to your property without knowing it!

More than half of California is mountain lion habitat. Mountain lions generally exist wherever deer are found. They are solitary and elusive, and their nature is to avoid humans.

Mountain lions prefer deer but, if allowed, they also eat pets and livestock. In extremely rare cases, even people have fallen prey to mountain lions.

Mountain lions that threaten people are immediately killed. Those that prey on pets or livestock can be killed by a property owner after the required depredation permit is secured. Moving problem mountain lions is not an option. It causes deadly conflicts with other mountain lions already there. Or the relocated mountain lion returns.

Help prevent deadly conflicts with these beautiful wild animals.

Living in Mountain Lion Country

  • Don’t feed deer; it is illegal in California and it will attract mountain lions.
  • Deer-proof your landscaping by avoiding plants that deer like to eat. For tips, request A Gardener’s Guide to Preventing Deer Damage from DFG offices.
  • Trim brush to reduce hiding places for mountain lions.
  • Don’t leave small children or pets outside unattended.
  • Install motion-sensitive lighting around the house.
  • Provide sturdy, covered shelters for sheep, goats, and other vulnerable animals.
  • Don’t allow pets outside when mountain lions are most active—dawn, dusk, and at night.
  • Bring pet food inside to avoid attracting raccoons, opossums and other potential mountain lion prey.
lion track dog track
Identifying Mountain Lion Tracks
The mountain lion track on the left can be distinguished from the dog track on the right by the absence of toenail prints and by the “M” shaped pad

Staying Safe in Mountain Lion Country

Mountain lions are quiet, solitary and elusive, and typically avoid people.

Mountain lion attacks on humans are extremely rare. However, conflicts are increasing as California’s human population expands into mountain lion habitat.

  • Do not hike, bike, or jog alone.
  • Avoid hiking or jogging when mountain lions are most active—dawn, dusk, and at night.
  • Keep a close watch on small children.
  • Do not approach a mountain lion.
  • If you encounter a mountain lion, do not run; instead, face the animal, make noise and try to look bigger by waving your arms; throw rocks or other objects. Pick up small children.
  • If attacked, fight back.
  • If a mountain lion attacks a person, 
    immediately call 911.

mountain lion habitat distribution map
click to enlarge 
 Mountain lions can be found wherever deer, their primary prey, are found. They are a Specially Protected Mammal in California and cannot be hunted.


Black Bears Roving in Florida

Posted: May 19th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Black bears 
…are on the loose in Southwest Florida 

THE TENUOUS TRUCE BETWEEN wildlife and urban life in Fort Myers, Lee County and all of Southwest Florida, for that matter, is fraying at the edges. And the source of this unease is one of the area’s longstanding residents: the black bear.

 

The state considers black bears a protected species. An unprovoked killing is a third-degree felony.

 

In recent weeks, there have been reports of a bear foraging in a Dumpster near Metro Parkway. On May 7, a San Carlos Park man was arrested and charged with using a .44 Magnum handgun to kill an 80-pound bear that had ventured near the man’s home. And last week, two more bears were killed — presumably by gunshot — and dumped by the side of State Road 29 in Collier County. Authorities believe the bears had been killed elsewhere and transported to the roadside site.

The sightings and the killings have prompted considerable discussion about the possible dangers bears pose in densely populated areas and how residents should react when they encounter the creatures.

“We have never had a bear attack in Florida,” says Gary Morse, a Lakelandbased spokesman for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Regarding the recent case in San Carlos Park, Mr. Morse says authorities determined the bear was not threatening.

 

PHOTOS COURTESY LORI YOUNG Above, one of the black bears in The Naples Zoo’s new habitat that opens Saturday, May 23. It will be the largest such exhibit at any zoo east of the Mississippi River. Left, David Tetzlaff, director of The Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens.

Because the state considers black bears a protected species, an unprovoked killing is a third-degree felony, which carries the possibility of a $5,000 fine and five years in prison. 

Although the number of encounters involving bears and humans is increasing, Mr. Morse says there is no cause for alarm. “Bears generally are very shy, and seek to avoid people,” he says. “It doesn’t take much to scare one off.” His advice should a bear wind up in your backyard? “Don’t be frightened. It’s probably just wandering through. Leave it alone. Don’t approach the bear or run toward it.”

 

 

And never, under any circumstance, he stresses, should anyone feed a bear. 

Mr. Morse estimates that Florida’s bear population is about 3,500. It takes about 30 square miles to support a bear, so it’s not unusual that one will occasionally stray into spaces normally occupied by humans. Those bears that do stray are invariably attracted by something associated with food, so keeping garbage and pet food secure will diminish the chances of an encounter.

If a bear does attack or exhibit hostile behavior, Mr. Morse advises contacting local authorities and the FWC hotline at (888) 404-3922.

“In most of these incidents, the bear is probably more frightened than the human,” he says.

Bullish on bears

Down in Naples, David Tetzlaff has bears on his mind, too, but for an altogether different reason. In fact, Mr. Tetzlaff is positively bullish on bears. As the director of The Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens, he has ample reason for his enthusiasm.

Mr. Tetzlaff and his staff are putting the final touches on a new black bear habitat that upon opening May 23 will be the largest such exhibit at any zoo east of the Mississippi River.

Mr. Tetzlaff says the new exhibit will help visitors understand black bears. And he believes that is the first step in allaying fears that may have arisen as a result of recent bear sightings.

“I want people to respect animals, not be afraid of them,” he says. “You can’t appreciate animals if you’re afraid of them. As much trouble as we’re having these days with habitat laws and endangered and threatened species, if people are afraid of these animals, they are not going to care about their survival.”

The zoo’s new bear habitat cost $750,000 to construct and encompasses 15,000 square feet. Two young black bears, a male and female, will occupy the space. The bears were not living in the wild before taking up residence at the zoo.

“These bears were in dire circumstances before they came here,” Mr. Tetzlaff explains. “They were in a private facility, in a backyard, and it was a substandard facility. Their owner died, and they could have been euthanized.”

Both animals are about 4 years old; the female weighs about 165 pounds, and the male tips the scales at close to 300 pounds, he says. (Life expectancy for black bears is somewhere between 15 and 30 years; and a full-grown bear can reach 500 pounds.)

“These bears are lucky; they got a new lease on life, and they will live in the best bear exhibit in North America,” Mr. Tetzlaff says.

The zoo habitat features a natural setting, complete with a railroad trestle that spans a creek, as well as a layout that approximates an urban backyard.

“We set it up to look like a backyard for a reason,” Mr. Tetzlaff says. “We want people to see this and realize that, yes, a bear could come into their backyard. That’s very important. The purpose of this habitat — other than entertainment — is to teach people how to live with bears.”

Many Floridians erroneously believe that bears are only to be found in the northern United States and Canada. It shocks some to discover that Florida boasts a substantial bear population. Mr. Tetzlaff says it is a constant misconception, even among people who have lived here all their lives, that there are no bears in Southwest Florida. “We have bears in Collier County and Lee County and all over Southwest Florida.”

Although no one knows for certain, Mr. Tetzlaff estimates there could be 500 to 1,000 black bears here. “They can adapt to live anywhere,” he says. “They can live in British Columbia, and they can live in Big Cypress. And this isn’t something new. The bears have been here forever.”

While Florida has yet to record a bear attack, Mr. Tetzlaff says that fact does not negate the need for caution when an encounter with a black bear occurs.

“Many people look at the black bear as cute, like a teddy bear,” he says. “They see grizzlies as ferocious and black bears as cuddly. But statistically, black bears injure or kill more people than grizzlies.” He’s quick to add that most local encounters are a result of a bear looking for food “or just exploring. They are not looking to harm.”

Face-to-face encounters

Naples Zoo visitors will also learn safety tips regarding black bears at the new exhibit. “We will talk bout faceto face encounters, and how to protect yourself,” Mr. Tetzlaff says. “We’ll also discuss what you can do on your property to discourage bears.” For example:

• If you feed your pets outside, bring the food in when they are finished.

• Don’t leave your barbecue grill outside. “Whether the grill has food on it or not, the bear can smell it a mile away,” Mr. Tetzlaff says.

• Keep bird feeders out of reach of bears.

• Don’t put your garbage out at night; put it out in the morning.

Mr. Tetzlaff, an avid bow hunter, says he has had six encounters with bears while in the woods and none turned ugly. But that is not to say there is no danger in an encounter.

“Most of the time nothing occurs, but if an encounter gets bad, it gets bad fast,” he says. “Don’t engage the bear. Just leave it alone. Do nothing to provoke it or attract it. If a bear comes for you, you are in trouble. They can run at 30 miles an hour, and they can climb a 100-foot tree in 30 seconds. With that in mind, you should never run from a bear if it comes at you. You can’t outrun the bear, and by turning and attempting to flee you are acting like prey.”

If a bear does attack, Mr. Tetzlaff advises that you “act big, act tough and yell at it.” If that doesn’t discourage the bear, then he says “fighting back” is advisable.”

The opening of the bear habitat coincides with the zoo’s 40th anniversary. The zoo was the brainchild of Mr. Tetzlaff’s father, a 6-foot-6-inch-tall swashbuckler known as “Jungle Larry.” The Plain Dealer, a Cleveland newspaper, said that Jungle Larry “lived a life as big as legend as an animal trainer, expedition leader and conservationist.” Jungle Larry appeared in three “Tarzan” movies in which he wrestled alligators as a stand-in for Johnny Weismuller.

In 1967, Jungle Larry and his wife, Nancy, who was nicknamed “Safari Jane,” happened across what was then the Caribbean Gardens in Naples and saw the potential for bigger things.

“They saw this little attraction, which didn’t have any animals — it was just trees and some birds at that time — and they thought it would a really neat place to put wild animals,” Mr. Tetzlaff recalls.

Two years later, the Tetzlaffs bought the small attraction, introduced animals and named it Jungle Larry’s Zoological Park.

From those humble beginnings, the Naples Zoo at Caribbean Gardens has emerged. Since 2005, the zoo has operated as a nonprofit that is governed by a board of directors. It is accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, something that only 10 percent of the zoos in the United States can boast. The zoo encompasses 43 acres, with about 30 of those acres in active use. Its annual operating budget is about $4 million and it employs some 50 people. New attractions, such as the bear habitat, are financed through donations and grants.

More than 260,000 people visited the zoo last year, and Mr. Tetzlaff expects attendance to spike this year because of the bear habitat and, oddly enough, the struggling economy.

“I think we are getting more people because with the economic conditions people are looking for things to do close to home that don’t involve as much travel and expense,” he says.

The zoo is still a Tetzlaff family affair. Mr. Tetzlaff’s brother, Tim, wife, Kelly, and son, Sasha, all hold positions at the zoo.

Before becoming zoo director, Mr. Tetzlaff, who is 46 years old, followed his father’s footsteps and was an animal trainer — yeah, one of those guys with a whip and a chair — who specialized in big cats. He gave up the excitement of animal training for the administrative work of running the zoo, and – despite his love of animal training — hasn’t looked back.

“I hope to do this the rest of my life,” he says. “And I hope we can keep getting better. For me to walk away from this or not do the very best I can, would be disrespecting everything my parents worked for and built.”


Bear Who Attacked Boy in Alberta was Hungry

Posted: May 19th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Predatory bear saw northern Albertan teenager as food, expert says

 

Large group of campers didn’t provide usual safety from attack

Experts say a 15-year-old boy mauled on Sunday was the victim of a predatory bear attack.

“In this instance, we’re presuming the bear saw the boy as food,” said Russell Stashko, co-chair of Alberta’s Bear Smart program.

The boy was camping with a large group of people at Roche Lake, a remote site accessible only by a three- to four-hour all-terrain vehicle ride east of Swan Hills.

Stashko said the bear showed up at their campsite Saturday night, but was scared off by a shotgun blast. It returned early the next morning and attacked the boy before being scared off again by the same gun.

Stashko said there is “no rhyme or reason” as to why the bear attacked the 15-year-old out of the group of 25 to 30 people he was with. It is unusual for a bear to even approach such a large group, he added.

“It is uncommon. Usually, there is safety in numbers,” Stashko said.

“Most bears, 99 per cent of the time, would prefer not to be around humans. It is an anomaly.”

However, Stashko said, this is the time of year when bear attacks are the most common, since they are just waking up from their winter sleep.

“The first thing they do when they come out of hibernation is look for food,” he said.

The boy was transported Sunday morning by air ambulance to the University of Alberta Hospital. STARS spokesman Cameron Heke said the air ambulance pilots were easily able to find the victim in a remote wooded area because of a mix of technology and good-old-fashioned smoke signals.

“They had a Global Positioning System … which was very helpful in us being able to find them because they were in a heavily wooded area. They also had a big fire going, so they used smoke as a signal, as well,” Heke said.

The boy was in stable condition when STARS transported him. Heke said one of the crew on the air ambulance told him the 15-year-old victim was very brave.

“He said ‘He was a very brave young lad.’ Those were his exact words.”

Alberta Health Services spokeswoman Holly Budd said the boy was doing well in hospital. His family did not wish to speak to the media.

Stashko said investigators are almost positive that the bear which attacked the boy was killed several hours later.

“We’re certain that the bear involved was shot by some bear hunters,” Stashko said.

To be certain, the investigators have taken bear DNA from the boy’s wounds and will compare it with DNA from the bear carcass.

Stashko said there are two kinds of bear attacks: defensive and predatory. In the case where a bear looks like it may attack a human in defence of itself or its young, the best thing a person can do is to back away and give the animal lots of room.

If a bear seems like it’s attacking for predatory reasons, a person should fight back and make as much noise as possible.

Stashko also recommended using devices such as a portable electric bear fence, which this group did not have.


Teen Mauled By Black Bear outside of Edmonton

Posted: May 19th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: bears, wildlife | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Black bear mauls teenager

 
Black bear
 

Black bear

Photograph by: Debra Brash, Times Colonist

A 15-year-old boy was mauled by a black bear Sunday morning while camping with a large group of people in a remote area near Swan Hills.

The boy was airlifted to an Edmonton hospital, said Joan McCracken, a spokeswoman for Alberta Sustainable Resource Development. She would not say what his condition was. McCracken said the boy was camping with two dozen people near Roche Lake, a remote spot 30 kilometres east of Swan Hills that is only accessible by all-terrain vehicle.

The bear first visited the campsite on Saturday night, but another camper fired a shot into the air to scare it away. But the bear returned around 5:30 a.m. Sunday and mauled the teenager. The same camper fired the gun again and the bear fled. The teen was taken to hospital by air ambulance and a response team evacuated the remaining campers and launched an investigation.

At 8:30 a.m., hunters told wildlife officials they shot a bear leaving the creek area where the mauled teen was camping.

Officials are testing that bear’s DNA to determine whether it is the same animal that attacked the boy.

Citing department policy, both McCracken and a spokeswoman for Capital Health refused to release any information about the boy’s injuries.

McCracken also refused to say if the boy was inside his tent at the time of the attack and whether he was following standard backcountry bear safety protocols.