Several of us tried to scare it off, but it wouldn't budge once it had food. However - the ranger seemed to have no problem scaring it off. Apparently this bear recognized the voice and knew not to mess with her.

July 20, 2009 11:01AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
July 20, 2009 04:37PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
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July 20, 2009 04:49PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
July 21, 2009 09:14AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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eeek
Did you try throwing rocks at it?
July 21, 2009 10:50AM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
Re: Upper Pines bear July 21, 2009 12:33PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 141 |
July 22, 2009 05:10AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
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Dearborn
. I now live on the east side of Yellowstone, and a local resident surprised a sow grizzly with 3 yearling cubs while hiking 2 days ago. The sow griz broke 3 of the hiker's ribs, possibly a leg and lacerated his face badly before he shot her 3 times with a .41 Magnum handgun. The bear died, the hiker was airlifted to Billings, MT and the cubs will hopefully survive. .
August 04, 2009 09:27PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
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Frank Furter
http://www.localnews8.com/Global/story.asp?S=10760170&nav=menu554_2_2
Man injured in grizzly encounter
Associated Press - July 21, 2009 7:15 AM ET
CODY, Wyo. (AP) - A Clark man was hospitalized with extensive injuries to his face following a Sunday afternoon encounter with a sow grizzly bear in Park County....
Re: Upper Pines bear July 21, 2009 09:32AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 101 |
July 21, 2009 09:53AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,876 |
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RobE
The rangers try to teach the bears to fear humans, but it sounds like the bears are only trained to fear rangers.
July 21, 2009 10:01AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 423 |
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July 21, 2009 07:05PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
July 21, 2009 10:35AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 321 |
July 28, 2009 11:56AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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PineCone
Speaking of bear boxes in Upper Pines (and the newer, larger style pictured above), has anyone seen any
new bear boxes this year in North Pines or Lower Pines by any chance?
I'm sure the answer is "no", but I only ask because they installed new bear boxes in Curry Village a year
or two ago, and when I arrived to camp at North Pines last year, there were new fire rings and picnic tables
in most of the sites. What those sites really need are new bear boxes...
July 29, 2009 03:35PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 321 |
July 29, 2009 05:21PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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PineCone
I've used the newer, larger bear boxes in Upper Pines, and they have a built in hasp (or whatever it's called) on each door to allow you to put a lock thru. I always use a Master key lock. The older (smaller) style bear boxes in the remainder of Upper Pines, and all of North and Lower Pines are also lockable.
I've never seen a bear box in Yosemite Valley campgrounds with no allowance to lock them, but I guess they can get loused up or broken if abused.
I seem to recall hearing that the newer, larger bear boxes in Upper Pines were provided not by the NPS, but by one of the nonprofit funds (The Yosemite Fund??). What happened to them installing them in the remainder of Upper Pines I do not know, and the other campgrounds as well. Maybe the budget ran out for the project.
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I wish instead of new picnic tables and fire rings in North Pines last year (neither of which were greatly needed from my personal observations), they'd have used the money for the newer style, larger bear boxes instead.
If you stay for a week or more, or have a larger number of people in a site, those old bear boxes are mighty scrawny, and don't hold as much...
July 29, 2009 05:54PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,882 |
July 29, 2009 06:12PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
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tomdisco
I thought it was not acceptable to put padlocks on bear boxes. Is that rule for communal boxes only like at trailhead parking lots? I know rangers have routinely cut them off at such locations.
July 29, 2009 09:03PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 321 |
July 29, 2009 09:14PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
July 29, 2009 10:01PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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eeek
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PineCone
"naahhh, I'll just leave it in the car, and cover it with a blanket"!...
Which is good for adding vents to a car:
July 29, 2009 11:38PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
July 30, 2009 06:31AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
July 30, 2009 08:26AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 321 |
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One issue concerns the size of many family coolers and the size of the storage boxes
July 30, 2009 09:12AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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Frank Furter
It seems to me the regulations in Yosemite which are beyond those even at Seki or any other park I have visited based on inherently flawed reasoning.
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Frank Furter
I think it is an fallacy that "food" visible or detected in a car is the main reason for breakins of a specific car. Every car that I have owned that carried kids has residual food in cracks and crevices. I don't think it is possible to eliminate food odors from any car that has had a food spill or even in which food has been consumed. There is an anecdotal story of a car breakin attributed to a mint in the glove box. Just seems highly unlikely that this sort of cause and effect exists. It is more likely that there is a degree of opportunistic, experimental desperation to bear break-ins that in retrospect, is attributed to some trivial food item in the vehicle.
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Frank Furter
One issue concerns the size of many family coolers and the size of the storage boxes. It seems wrong to "encourage" people to visit national parks essentially without any preparation or equipment requirements whatsoever yet upon arrival, have specific requirements for storage of coolers in small bear boxes. Sure, the info is on the website, but I doubt that every new visitor knows to check the website. Many large coolers just don't fit in the storage boxes. In addition, many minivans are used which do not have trunks for true storage. At the very least, there should be information on the roads prior to the park that large coolers will be a problem in the Valley or a secure location in the Valley to store the giant megacoolers.
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Frank Furter
I remain baffled how the food preparation areas of the Valley, outdoor vending machines, outdoor eating areas (like the pizza deck at Curry) and the High Sierra Camps can have food exposed on a regular basis and still seem to be exempt from tight bear regulations. Some High Sierra Camps have outdoor grills that are left out overnight that are just dripping with meat residue and do not get disturbed by bears. The screens on High Sierra Camps are no more durable than the usual tent structures, yet food can be left in screened areas of HSCs but food cannot be kept in tents in campgrounds adjacent to the HSCs.
July 30, 2009 12:12PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
July 30, 2009 12:42PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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Frank Furter
I think the main point I am trying to make is that the car or car owner is not solely to blame for every car and bear problem in the Valley. I think the situation is more complex than that-- there is a global problem in the Valley with foods, food odors and opportunities. I do not believe that if everyone drove new vehicles to the valley and complied with every car related regulation that the car breakin problem would disappear. I wonder how often the service vehicles in the park are violated?
I think bears will continue to explore vehicles for food, regardless of the actual presence of food or food related items detectable from the exterior of the vehicle. Cars are parked in untrafficed areas, tend to be of a size to allow bears to explore, and, of course, by being in the vicinity of food locations (commercial and camping) can be generally associated with food opportunities. Somewhere (perhaps this discussion forum) I recall learning that the backcountry signs are made from steel because the wooden signs were destroyed by bears yearly. What is the food value of a wooden sign? Probably just attracted to the new smell of paint and the human odors associated.
July 30, 2009 12:48PM | Admin Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 17,122 |
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y_p_w
I always found the requirement that car child seats must be removed to be odd. Certainly they would absorb baby drool, crumbs, burped milk, etc, but then so does the seat area under the child seat. Perhaps it is a matter of bears seeing those things as possible targets.
July 30, 2009 04:31PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
July 21, 2009 12:14PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 2,321 |
July 21, 2009 06:51PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,375 |
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mrcondron
I have to say it. No Way the latch wasn't working to the point a bear could open the locker. More likely, since they can be a little tough to open, the camper did not secure the latch. There. I feel better.
July 21, 2009 07:03PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 2,321 |
July 21, 2009 07:17PM | Moderator Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,347 |
July 21, 2009 07:19PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 2,321 |
Re: Upper Pines bear July 30, 2009 07:18AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 63 |
August 01, 2009 10:50AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,232 |
August 01, 2009 11:56AM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 321 |
August 01, 2009 12:55PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 1,942 |
That is fairly common, I think. I don't know if there are well established standards but the Bear Vault information mentioned being tested at the Folsom City Zoo. In West Yellowstone, the Grizzly-Wolf Discovery Center is involved with testing products.Quote
PineCone
one manufacturer actually tested their bear boxes using (captive) bears, to 'field test' their effectiveness...
August 01, 2009 02:38PM | Registered: 15 years ago Posts: 321 |