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Humans and bears - Wild encounters

India brotherbear Offline
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http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-...story.html 
 
What the most endangered grizzlies in the Lower 48 don't need: A national hiking trail through their territory
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India brotherbear Offline
Grizzly Enthusiast

In the same magazine as seen on post #168: Grizzlies travel along watercourses, so floating northern rivers is a good way to hunt them. 
In other words, hunters are quietly paddling their boats on a river and shooting unwary bears. Unbelievable!
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India brotherbear Offline
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( This post was last modified: 11-17-2018, 09:37 AM by Rishi )




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United States brobear Offline
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https://www.bearmageddonnews.com/2019/02...IYZiae_zBA 
 
Woman Who Used Potato Diet to Keep Bear From Eating Her Decapitated by Bear

 February 11, 2019
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Finland Shadow Offline
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( This post was last modified: 08-19-2019, 01:09 PM by Shadow )

(02-13-2019, 10:01 PM)brobear Wrote: https://www.bearmageddonnews.com/2019/02...IYZiae_zBA 
 
Woman Who Used Potato Diet to Keep Bear From Eating Her Decapitated by Bear

 February 11, 2019

This is a fabricated story, never happened. That site is full of nonsense. Just to be clear, there are no cases of bear or any other animal decapitating other animals by paw swipe. They can break bones, when hit is landing perfectly, but no limbs or heads flying in the air :) No matter is it a bear, tiger, lion etc. Or a horse kicking straight to head. Lethal is one thing, decapitating demands some human made weapon used by human or then time for predator to use teeth and claws.
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Finland Shadow Offline
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( This post was last modified: 08-19-2019, 05:54 PM by Shadow )

Usually brown bear is quite harmless for people, but in unusual conditions also bad things can happen. There is that old phrase "never wake up a sleeping bear" and at least in my country is often said, that wounded bear is the most dangerous bear there is.

In a way this older incident gives justification to both of those phrases/claims even though no certainty, what was the reason why this bear woke up earlier than usually from hibernation. Weight compared to size for sure indicates, that it might haven´t had enough fat to hibernate longer. 9 feet tall and only 749 lbs (340 kg) isn´t so much. And it might explain at least partially what happened then.

Edit: Actually when looking at dates, I wonder if that bear had hibernated at all... after all mid November and in so light condition.
Here:

The Sankebetsu brown bear incident of 1915 was the worst bear attack in Japanese history

A recreation of Kesagake

*This image is copyright of its original author

A memorial for the Sankebetsu Brown Bear incident. Author: さえぼー. CC BY 4.0

*This image is copyright of its original author

[i]A re-creation of a pioneer cottage in Hokkaido, located at the Sankebetsu Brown Bear Incident Reconstruction Location. Author: タクナワン. CC BY 3.0[/i]
[i]
*This image is copyright of its original author
[/i]

[i][i]A reproduction of the interior of the Ota family house.[/i][/i]
[i][i]
*This image is copyright of its original author
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[i][i]It was a cold winter in Sankebetsu Rokusen Sawa, which is some 18 miles inland from the west coast of Hokkaido Island. The year was 1915, and the world was at war. But in Japan, besides fighting  Imperial Germany, the inhabitants of Sankebetsu Rokusen Sawa had a different kind of enemy: a huge Ussuri brown bear. The bear had woken early from its hibernation. Hungry and looking for food, it began a killing spree that would devastate many lives. Due to the meticulous Japanese records kept since that time, almost all the details of the events are known today.[/i][/i]

It all began on a mid-November morning when the brown bear appeared on the doorstep of the Ikeda family. This first encounter with the bear was scary but essentially harmless, as the bear took some corn and left shortly afterward. Although it was too early for a bear to wake up, meetings with wild animals weren’t uncommon in the area since it was a freshly settled community.


Unfortunately, the bear appeared again on November 20. The head of the Ikeda family became concerned and called his son and some friends from the neighboring village for help. On November 30, they managed to shoot the bear but wounded it only and the animal managed to escape, leaving a trail of blood. They followed the trail to Mount Onishika, but they didn’t manage to catch up to it. Believing that it would not return again since it must have been deterred by the gunshot wound, the people put a stop to the search.
[i]Tragically, they were very wrong.[/i]

The bear reappeared on the morning of December 9, this time at the home of the Ota family. Inside the house, Abe Mayu, the wife of the head of the Ota household, was babysitting a baby (which was not related to her) called Hasumi Mikio. The bear entered the house, attacked the baby, and killed it. A few seconds later, the bear took Mayu and dragged her out of the house. The scene was terrible; Mayu was later found by a search party and her remains were buried under a tree in the snow. The search party finally located the bear 150 meters into the forest. Five of the men shot at it, but only one bullet hit and the wounded bear managed to escape again.

The village was in a panic as people feared that the enraged and hungry bear would return for more human flesh. Many armed villagers came to the house of the Ota family to keep guard and an additional 50 guards were deployed at the house of their neighbors, the Miyouke family. During the night, the bear appeared in the yard of the Ota family. One of the men took a shot at it, but missed. The guards from the neighboring homestead arrived to assist but by that time, the bear was gone. Nobody could have ever expected what was about to ensue.


As well as the 50 guards that were posted in the yard of the Miyouke family household, there were also several women with their children inside, including Miyouke’s wife, Yayo. Now, with the guards dispatched to the other house, the women and children were left unprotected. The fleeing bear had managed to get past the guards unseen and got into the house of Miyouke. Inside, Yayo was preparing a meal while carrying one of her children on her back. When she heard noises outside she went to investigate, but it was too late, the bear was already in the house. Yayo tried to escape but her second son tripped her in the dark and she fell, and while she was on the ground, the bear attacked her and bit the child on her back.

During this attack, there was only one guard left outside the house. When he heard the noise inside, he opened the door and the beast left Yayo and attacked him instead. While he attempted to defend himself, the bear struck him in the back. The bear continued with its killing spree and killed Yayo’s third son. Two more children and a pregnant woman were killed at the house that night.


Yayo somehow managed to escape and alert the guardsmen who were returning from the unsuccessful hunt. She told them about the attack. There were still noises in the house, which was a sign that the bear was inside. The guardsmen recommended burning the house down, but this was rejected by Yayo, who was hoping that somebody might still be alive inside.


The guards then divided themselves up into two parties: one at the back of the house and one at the front. When the bear appeared at the front door, the confused guards feared that somebody would die in the crossfire, and the bear managed to disappear into the night; this beast that had killed six people in only two days had escaped once again. Inside the house, the scene was horrible. Only two children survived the attack.



When the head of the Miyouke household (who was traveling the night of the attack) found out about the tragedy, he decided to contact Yamamoto Heikichi, a professional bear hunter. When he explained the attack to him, Heikichi was convinced that the culprit was a bear called “Kesagake” (vaguely translated as “the diagonal slash from the shoulder”). According to him, this bear had previously killed three women. Heikichi, who had traded his gun for alcohol, refused Miyouke’s request for help, telling him that he wasn’t in the business anymore.


Two days later, a government team of snipers was formed, which eventually, after some persuasion, included Yamamoto Heikichi. They were intent on hunting down and killing this bear that was terrorizing the region. On December 13, the bear Kesagake invaded the house of the Ota family yet again, taking all of their food reserves, then continuing on to ransacking a further eight houses before returning to the mountain.

The search party now consisted of 60 men, together with Heikichi. That same night they managed to spot Kesagake and shot at it but once again, they failed to kill it.  A small team lead by Yamamoto was assembled to follow the blood trail and foot prints of the wounded bear. Yamamoto, who knew Kesagake’s habits very well, managed to track it down under a Japanese oak tree. He decided to move with only one man accompanying him, and they got to a distance of within 20 meters of the bear when they fired. Yamamoto shot Kesagake directly in the heart, and with the next shot hit it in the head. The beast was finally dead. Kesagake was huge and when they measured it, it was 749 pounds and nearly 9 feet tall.

Soon after these tragic events, Rokusen Sawa became a ghost town, as many of the villagers left in fear of more bear attacks.

So what was the cause of this killing spree? Many people believe that the bear woke up early due to hunger, probably making it more aggressive. Another problem that was identified was the deforestation in the region, a process which brought bears and humans into close quarters. Deforestation also chases out the bears’ natural food source, leading them to search for food in human settlements. It is important to note that bears do not naturally hunt and kill humans. Although it is always tragic, they usually only attack if the humans are in the way of their food or a threat to their cubs.


Today, in Rokusen Sawa, there is a forest shrine called the Sankebetsu Brown Bear Incident Reconstruction Location. Here, in memory of those who died, the story is presented authentically, with an original house from that period having been reconstructed and full explanations given of the events that occurred.


Source: https://www.thevintagenews.com/2017/08/03/the-sankebetsu-brown-bear-incident-of-1915-was-the-worst-bear-attack-in-japanese-history/
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Finland Shadow Offline
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I noticed, that @brotherbear had already posted that incident from Japan, well, maybe there were people who noticed it now :)
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BorneanTiger Offline
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(03-06-2018, 08:25 PM)brotherbear Wrote: http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-...story.html 
 
What the most endangered grizzlies in the Lower 48 don't need: A national hiking trail through their territory

See which populations of grizzlies became extinct due to persecution by humans: https://wildfact.com/forum/topic-grizzli...8#pid94358
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
Ecology & Rewilding
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Resolving Human-Bear Conflict: A Global Survey of Countries, Experts, and Key Factors


*This image is copyright of its original author
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United Kingdom Sully Offline
Ecology & Rewilding
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From "The Missing Lynx" 

"About 6000 years ago a Mesolithic human took a bear cub and gave it a (horse) bit before the age of six months. We can guess the age because the first molar in bears appears at four months old. The bit must have been in place between these ages to allow the teeth and jaws to grow around it. The tamed bear lived until about six years old, judging by the number and stage of the teeth in the jaw."
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