Did I do the correct thing?

Posted by: sonnychiba

Did I do the correct thing? - 05/26/09 04:07 PM

After a few days of wilderness camping, I camped at an established campsite and had my first close encounter with a (black) bear over the weekend. The bear came into our campground and sniffed around our tents, which was a little nerve racking, for about 20 minutes then moved on. I figure it was there out of habit, looking for anything that may have been left out. My camping partner did not hear the bear and never woke up. I remained quiet in my tent, holding my bear mace. Like I said, the bear eventually moved on.

The question I have is should I have made a noise (a loving whisper, throat clearing, yelling, air horn) to alert the bear to our presence? I know the rules when encoutering a bear in the open, but I was in my one person tent and not very mobile in the unlikely event I would need to defend myself.

Should I have done something differently? Thanks guys! Sonny.....
Posted by: kbennett

Re: Did I do the correct thing? - 05/26/09 05:28 PM

The bear knows you are there. Sounds like you did fine.
Posted by: ohiohiker

Re: Did I do the correct thing? - 05/26/09 05:29 PM

You didn't get attacked or have any gear damaged, so I'd call that correct. smile

I would've done the same thing as you, except that if the bear sniffed within 10 feet or so of the tent for more than a minute or so, I'd start talking loudly and suddenly. I had the same thing happen to me in the Smokies long ago, except the bear never came very close to the tent, that I know of anyway.

Did you cook in camp by any chance? Maybe a previous camper did. eek
Posted by: Trailrunner

Re: Did I do the correct thing? - 05/26/09 11:39 PM

Over the years I have driven off several bears by making noise both in populated campgrounds and in the backcountry. Some could not be scared off.

From the SIBBG website:

If a bear enters your area:

* Check to make sure all your food and food-related items are stored properly.
* Get everyone together (especially kids) and look really big and make lots of noise (e.g., yelling, banging pots, clapping, etc.).
* Never surround a bear--they need an escape route!
* Never separate a sow from her cubs (sometimes cubs are up a nearby tree).
* If a bear huffs at you and shows its profile, it may be ready to bluff charge. Stand your ground or back away slowly. Do not run.
* Never try to take food back from a bear!