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Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Sun Aug 01, 2010 12:57 am
by 308Mike
Linkarooni - the four-footed food processors are on the prowl:
Bear Kills 1 Person, Injures 2 Others at Campground Near Yellowstone

Published July 28, 2010

| Associated Press

COOKE CITY, Mont. -- At least one bear rampaged through a heavily occupied campground Wednesday near Yellowstone National Park in the middle of the night, killing one person and injuring two others during a terrifying attack that forced people to hide in their vehicles as the victims were torn from their tents.

Authorities said three separate attacks left a male dead and a woman and another male injured at the Soda Butte campground. The woman suffered severe lacerations and crushed bones from bites on her arms, and the surviving male was bitten on his calf.

Wildlife officials did not release the names or ages of the victims, but said they were in three different tents.

Don and Paige Wilhelm of Aledo, Texas, were spending the night with their two boys in the campsite next to the woman when they first heard a scream. It was coming from several sites away where, they later discovered, a boy was being attacked.

"We weren't sure what it was. We thought maybe teenagers yelling," Don Wilhelm said. They tried to go back to sleep, but 10 minutes later the bear was tearing into the tent of the woman, who they said was from Canada and about 50 years old.

"First she said, "No!' Then we heard her say, 'It's a bear! I've been attacked by a bear!" Paige Wilhelm said. As the animal snorted and huffed outside their tent, the Wilhelms first thought they would lie on top of their children to protect them from what seemed an inevitable attack. But after the noises outside stopped, they bolted for their SUV.

Don Wilhelm aimed the headlights at the woman's campsite, "and we could see her there, kind of half in her sleeping bag. I don't remember seeing any tent," he said.

With their 9- and 12-year-old boys pleading for them to stay in the vehicle, the Wilhelms decided to drive through the Soda Butte Campground, honking their horn and yelling at other campers to alert them.

At one point they encountered a truck leaving the campground. Inside was the third victim -- a teenager who apparently attempted to fight off the bear by punching it in the nose and face after it entered his family's tent and bit into his leg.

Don Wilhelm said he later returned to the Canadian woman's campsite with two other men and helped a nurse staying at the campground bandage her wounds. Wilhelm says they didn't find out a man had been killed in the attack until later Wednesday.

Both survivors were taken into nearby Cooke City -- a tourist town just outside Yellowstone -- where an ambulance later picked them up and took them to a hospital in Cody, Wyo.

The victims were in three different tents, according to Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Warden Capt. Sam Sheppard. Two of the tents were close to each other. The male who was killed was alone in a tent about a quarter-mile away in the heavily occupied campground that has 27 sites for tents and recreational vehicles, Sheppard said.

All three victims had their food in storage boxes, Sheppard said.

"They were doing things right," Sheppard said. "It was random. I have no idea why this bear picked these three tents out of all the tents there."

Wildlife officials were inspecting the campground, which is run by the U.S. Forest Service, to determine what happened.

"We don't know if it was one bear, two bears, a black bear or grizzly bear," Fish, Wildlife and Parks spokesman Ron Aasheim said. "Obviously, the bear's gone now. Will it come back tonight? That's the question."

Authorities set five baited traps and were collecting bear hair, saliva and droppings while measuring the victims' bite wounds to determine the type and number of bears involved. Two of the traps were set where the male who died was camping.

The campground was closed, but from the roadside a large hole could be seen in the side of a small, brown tent still set up at the site.

If the bear is caught, it will be killed, Sheppard said.

Park County dispatchers took a 911 call early Wednesday from a male reporting that a bear had bitten his ankle and was tearing up tents, Aasheim said. Dispatchers got two more calls, including one from a man who said a bear bit the leg of his daughter's boyfriend.

At 3:50 a.m., park officials went through the campground to advise campers to get into their cars. A half-hour later, the dead male was discovered at a campsite. Authorities evacuated the campground, sending campers to nearby hotels.

It was not immediately clear how many people were in the campground at the time.

The same campground was the site of a 2008 attack in which a grizzly bear bit and injured a man sleeping in a tent. A young adult female grizzly was captured in a trap four days later and transported to a bear research center at Washington State University in Pullman.

"Now the suspicion among a lot of the residents is that the bear they caught (in 2008) was not the right one," said Gary Vincelette, who has a cabin in nearby Silver Gate.

Last year, another grizzly broke into three cabins in the nearby community of Silver Gate, said Vincelette. That bear was shot and killed by a Silver Gate resident when it returned to the area.

"Three attacks in three years -- we haven't ever had anything like that, and I've been coming up here since I was a kid," Vincelette said.

The 10-acre Soda Butte campground is in Gallatin National Forest, just off the mountainous Beartooth Highway about 125 miles southwest of Billings.

"It is a populated area for bears, not just grizzly bears but black bears," Gallatin National Forest spokeswoman Marna Daley said.

Two other nearby campgrounds also have been closed, Daley said. Forest Service officials will consider shutting down more campgrounds after consulting with state wildlife officials leading the investigation, she said.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Sun Aug 01, 2010 7:43 am
by Lokidude
My neighbor the bear trapper was headed up there Friday to help. The speculation at that time was a sow with cubs. The tents were completely clean, the campers weren't rookies, they'd camped out here before on multiple occasions. He had his dog with him, not to chase the bear, but to watch his back.

Now y'all see why I don't go out in the woods without at least one gun. I can be in Cooke in about an hour, and that's driving some seriously winding roads. And for the love of all that's good and decent, if you camp in bear country, follow the advisories, store your food in proper containers, and don't feed the damn things.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Sun Aug 01, 2010 5:26 pm
by TheIrishman
Lokidude wrote:The tents were completely clean, the campers weren't rookies, they'd camped out here before on multiple occasions. He had his dog with him, not to chase the bear, but to watch his back.
Yeah, these weren't inexperienced campers. Unfortunately they were less than prepared campers.
Lokidude wrote:Now y'all see why I don't go out in the woods without at least one gun.
I never go to bear country(and our blacks are tiny) without the 12ga, but was discussing this on a camping related forum and the consensus was that a gun may have been of no use as the attack happened while they were sleeping. I would have still had one, but waking to a bear standing over you tends to put you at a distinct disadvantage. Unfortunately there are still those that believe it will never happen to them. Not to mention all the neo-hippys who think they are safe "communing with nature" unarmed.
Lokidude wrote:And for the love of all that's good and decent, if you camp in bear country, follow the advisories, store your food in proper containers, and don't feed the damn things.
In established campsites the cooler goes into a bear box or when dispersed camping, my Yeti Tundra gets locked and chained to a tree at least 100 yards from camp. A roof top tent may help a little but unless you're driving Bigfoot, I doubt a bear would have trouble climbing in.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2010 12:14 am
by Lokidude
Just talked to the trapper. Ended up being a sow with three cubs. They destroyed the sow, and the cubs are now in the Billings zoo. I guess it's the best possible outcome of a bad situation.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 4:14 am
by MDCMKY
I always carry my Marlin 1895M .450 Marlin loaded with Hornady 350 gr FP's [2,000 fps/3,200 ftlbs]
in "the country", and any bears or other animals with a bad attitude are not going to survive.


Image

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 4:09 pm
by Lokidude
My boomstick of choice where the wild things are remains a Remington 760 in .30-06, stoked with 165 grainers doing right around 2900. That and a 10mm make decent company.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 6:20 pm
by Matthew Mayner
Just another reminder that it isn't our physical strength that keeps us on top of the food chain.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 7:35 pm
by Flintlock Tom
I kind of wonder how much good a big-bore rifle is going to do if you wake from a sound sleep with a grizzly dragging you out of your tent by your thigh, then starts to shake you to tear off a chunk.
We don't camp much in bear country, but I'm thinking that having one person standing watch might not be a bad idea.

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 7:38 pm
by Aglifter
Well, a dog would seem to be a good idea to me. It might be an argument for a big bore revolver - I would think it'd be safe to have a lever-action or pump action unchambered, around you in your sleep, but might be difficult to get into operation.

Perhaps if you made some kind of "snap-over" holster to keep the hammer down on a lever-action, it would be safe to sleep w., chambered...

Re: Bear Kills 1, Injures 2 at Campground Near Yellowstone

Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2011 7:57 pm
by Erik
Why not set up a tripwire or motion sensors around the tent? Have them set off a light or flash and a buzzer to give everyone fair warning if the sudden light dont scare the bear off. And have it clearly marked to avoid other people setting it off.
That should give everyone some warning before the bear is on top of them.