At an Intersection in Gaspé, Quèbec
Black Bear, Canada, Natural History, Quebec
Look to the right.
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Category Archive 'Black Bear'
17 Dec 2011
At an Intersection in Gaspé, QuèbecBlack Bear, Canada, Natural History, QuebecLook to the right. 08 Oct 2010
Women Bear-Hunters of QuebecBlack Bear, Hunting, QuebecOn today’s BBC radio’s Women’s Hour, in an 11:09 episode, correspondent Anna Kostalas encounters 9 female hunters taking the Quebec Hunting and Fishing Federation training course for hunting black bear. The background commentary by Georges Dupras of the Animal Alliance of Canada is notable for its errors, intolerance, and authoritarianism. Dupras grudgingly concedes that hunting for material economic motives, for subsistence, is acceptable (big of him to give native hunters and back country survivalists his permission), but opposes passionately hunting for spiritual sustenance and aesthetic experience, hunting for sport. To a self-appointed “expert” like Dupras, sport hunting is simply taking pleasure in killing. The 9 Québécoises ignore the prig Dupras, and enjoy and defend hunting. Hat tip to Rafal Heydel-Mankoo. 11 Aug 2009
Bears Not Always Afraid of PeopleBlack Bear, Colorado, Human Predation, Natural History
Since I have black bear walking regularly through my yard at my home atop the Blue Ridge, stories like today’s do make me reflect upon our current complacency about sharing our neighborhoods with potentially lethal large predators. Mrs. Munson’s case was different from most of ours. She was living in a remote wilderness location. In California and the Eastern US, though, bears or mountain lions commonly reside in the midst of residential suburbs. We rely on our belief that a long tradition of hunting (now very much in desuetude as far as our large predator neighbors are concerned) suffices to assure their fear of man as the better-armed and more dangerous predator. Our reliance on that established status has worked well enough in the Eastern US so far, but, of course, the bear have only returned to most places very recently. The mountain lion, here in the East, is mostly just a rumor.
26 Jun 2009
View From My WindowBlack Bear, Blue Ridge, Natural History, Virginia, Wild Turkey
We live on top of the Blue Ridge, a narrow 1500’ (457.2m.) high mountain separating the Virginia Piedmont from the Shenandoah Valley, at the very northern end of Virginia. This morning, around 7:30 AM EDT, I happened to look out of the rear window of our second floor hallway, and saw walking purposefully from north to south across our backyard directly behind the house a fully-grown black bear (Ursus americanus). That was as close as I’ve ever seen a bear outside captivity. Yesterday, in the afternoon, I saw in the same yard two hen turkeys supervising either end of a long line of very small turkey poults. There were more than a dozen baby turkeys. Apparently, two mothers were walking their offspring together, keeping them under close control like a pair of elementary school teachers on a science tour. 15 Sep 2008
Get the Geezers Off Those BikesBicycles, Black Bear, Colorado, Highway Safety, MontanaIs there any sight more ridiculous than some aging baby boomer peddling away in his spandex outfit and insectoid helmet on a bicycle? Bicycles are alright for small boys to use on paper routes or to get to the park to play baseball, but their use as a fitness tool by aging hippies is unseemly and undignified and only results in inconvenience to motorists and unnecessary accidents. Not even the bears in the Rocky Mountain West are safe these days. Last Thursday, UPI reports:
That bear may be “a beautiful creature,” but a spindle-shanked, potbellied goofball in day-glo spandex certainly is not. Last June, there was another incident of the same kind in Colorado, as the Rocky Mountain News reports:
When are these bears going to wise up? A fully-digested bicyclist is a safe bicyclist, I always say. Hat tip to Karen L. Myers. 19 Aug 2008
Plucky Cow Routs BearBizarre, Black Bear, Colorado, Natural History
Apple, a heifer resident of Hygiene, Colorado, discovered an intruder in her pasture. She touched noses investigatively, doubtless reaching the correct conclusion that the visitor was a black bear cub, and promptly proceeded to run him off. 10 May 2008
Unpaid Guard at Louisiana’s Angola PrisonAngola Prison, Black Bear, Louisiana, Natural HistoryAP: The way the warden sees it, the more than 400-pound black bear living in the middle of the sprawling Louisiana State Penitentiary is an extra layer of security. 12 Dec 2007
Davy Crockett’s 10th Great Grandson Kills Bear at Age 5Americana, Arkansas, Big Game Hunting, Black Bear, David Crockett, The Right StuffRenowned hunter, frontiersman, Indian fighter, and Congressman David Crockett of Tennessee, who died fighting for the Liberty of Texas at the Alamo in 1836, was reputed to have begun his hunting exploits by killing a bear at the age of 3. Davy Crockett’s hunting prowess as a toddler is usually thought to have been only a legend, but as ABC7 News reports:
2:15 KATV video Let’s hope the kid runs for Congress someday. 01 Oct 2007
Black Bear Rescued From California BridgeBlack Bear, California, Natural HistoryThe bear was walking across the 80ft (24.38 meters) high bridge on Highway 40 near Donner Summit in the Sierra Nevada when the closeness of two oncoming cars spooked it, causing it to jump over the railing. Falling, it managed to grab on to a ledge and pull itself onto a concrete girder beneath the bridge. Local volunteers tranquilized and rescued the stranded bear. 04 Sep 2007
Bear Attacks 51 Year-Old in County ParkBlack Bear, Human Predation, Natural History, Washington
But some left coast neighbors are defending the bear:
22 Jun 2007
Ex-Marine Kills Bear With FirewoodBlack Bear, Georgia, Human Predation, The Right Stuff, USMCFormer Marine Chris Everhart was camping with his three sons, ages 6 to 11, at Low Gap Creek Campgrounds near Helen, Georgia in the Chattahochee National Forest. Around 9:30 in the evening, a (variously reported as 275 or 300 lb – 125 or 136 kg) female black bear invaded the Everhart campsite, attempting to make off with a food cooler. The overly adventuresome six-year-old Logan Everhart sprang to his family’s defense, seized a shovel and advanced on the bear trying to frighten off the dangerous predator. The bear responded by growling and advancing on the small boy. Everhart’s knife and pistol were packed away and out of reach, so the desperate father simply grabbed the first weapon that came to hand: a large piece of firewood. Everhart flung the log, striking the bear in the head, fatally. Everhart’s score was one log, one bear. Everhart was a hero to his sons, but not to the government. The Forest Service promptly gave him a $75 ticket for “failing to secure his campsite.” 20 Jun 2007
Black Bear Kills 11-Year-Old Camper in UtahBlack Bear, Human Predation, UtahA black bear (Ursus americanus) made two attacks on campers’ tents in a camping area about two miles above Timpooneke campground in American Fork Canyon, Utah on Sunday.
MSNBC 2:51 video 31 Oct 2006
Babysitter Shoots Bear, Saves ChildrenBlack Bear, Human Predation, Idaho, Natural HistoryWe almost missed this one. Just found it via a link to NYM. Associated Press, recently reported (10/12), the case of a spirited and quick-thinking babysitting aunt who saved two nieces and a nephew from an aggressive black bear.
Hat tip to Traction Control. 23 Jul 2006
55 Year Old Ontario Man Kills Bear With KnifeBlack Bear, Human Predation, Natural History, The Right Stuff
Reading of the death of Dr. Jacqueline Perry, last September, in a bear attack, Waterloo, Ontario resident Tom Tilley resolved to arm himself with a six inch hunting knife. Perry’s husband had tried unsuccessfully to drive off the bear which was attacking his wife, futilely stabbing at it with a Swiss Army knife. (Since this was Canada, nobody even thought of carrying a gun.) Tilley’s decision to carry the knife proved providential. Last week, during a 12-day canoe trip, Tilley found himself being stalked by an aggressive black bear near Abbey Lake (in the vicinity of Wawa, Ontario) When the bear blocked Tilley’s path, and began advancing menacingly, Sam, his Staffordshire terrier, came out from behind his master, and placed himself between Tilley and the bear. The bear grabbed the dog in his jaws, but thinking to himself “’You’re not going to kill my dog,” the horrified Tilley drew his knife, and advanced to the attack. Tilley leaped onto the bear’s back, and began stabbing. Though bitten on the hand, Tom Tilley killed that bear. The wounded man was able to drag his canoe over a short portage and crossed a nearby lake where he was able to find some American campers equipped with a satellite phone. They summoned a float plane for an emergency medical evacuation. Wikipedia has a incomplete list of fatal North American bear attacks. There have been a dozen people killed by black bears since the year 2000. |