mrcondron wrote:
> Bears, big boars, sows with cubs, both totally wild and some
> that were "bad bears".
I've never seen a bad bear that I know of. I've heard plenty of stories but in every one of those stories the bear was just intimidating the hiker and they were falling for it.
> Mountain lion, one and it was just outside the park.
I've only seen one wild mountain lion in my life and it was in the San Bernardino Mountains. I'm sure many lions have seen me though and I haev seen lots of tracks.
> Many marmots. They are all over the place.
Indeed:
http://yosemitephotos.net/main.php?g2_itemId=1182&g2_imageViewsIndex=1> Snakes, mostly rattle snakes but a few gopher snakes, some
I almost stepped on a rattle snake near the bottom of the Snow Creek trail. My boot went down about an inch from its head.
Lost count of the number of rattle snakes I saw along the Tuolumne River. The Pate Valley is teeming with them.
> Deer, bucks, does and fawns. They are pretty much all over the
> place.
http://yosemitephotos.net/main.php?g2_itemId=1978&g2_imageViewsIndex=1While sitting in a chair reading a book in Porcupine Flat Campground the deer would walk through my site unafraid less than 10 feet from me.
> Grouse, but only when I have gotten close to a nest. The hen
> Birds, from lots of little ones up to the big eagles. The
> eagles tend to be in the back country.
This redtail let me get close while he was looking for something to eat in the grass:
http://yosemitephotos.net/main.php?g2_itemId=2845&g2_imageViewsIndex=1> Coyotes which in the back country you can't see up close but
> you can hear. Very cool the hear them calling to each other.
They seem to be common along the roads.
> Mosquitoes. Not really an animal but more of a plague.
Definately a plague at times.
> Fox but only one.
One year we had a fox at Deep Creek Hot Springs (http://deepcreekhotsprings.net/). Unfortunately some jerk decided to shoot it.
> For safety I would suggest that you never try to approach any
> wild animal.
People have been killed by deer in the park. Don't try to pet them.
> If it's a wild bear with cubs turn and walk back in
> the direction you came from without hesitation.
You can stay back and watch. You don't have to run away. Just don't make yourself a threat.
> If you hear a
> rattlesnake stop cold and try to locate the snake and then move
> away from it.
Ha! That time on the Snow Creek trail I teleported 15 feet down the trail. Then I sat back and watched the snake do its snakey things for a while.
> Do not drink any water from stream or lakes without treating it
> first. There are parasites in all the water in the Sierra
> Nevada Mountains. While there is no guarantee you will get
> infected by them it is NOT worth the risk.
About half the people that get infected by giardia have no symptoms. But around 10% get very ill. Not something to chance.
> If you are an mean thoughtless person and want to help kill
> animals in the wild then feed them.
I had a squirrel come up and bite my thumb at the top of Nevada Falls one time. I have no doubt this behavior was due to being fed by humans.
Please don't feed the wildlife. It's bad for the animals and it'll be bad for you if a ranger sees it.