Another reason to watch out for bears.

Joined
Mar 18, 1999
Messages
9,966
This happened in a national park that I go to quite a bit, I used to go offroading near Lockwood Valley road all the time. Wild story, I would never imagine this happening! (Quoted from local online news)

An off-road motorcyclist was injured late Sunday when he hit a bear, authorities said Monday.

The man was riding a dirt bike in the area of Lockwood Valley Road in Los Padres National Forest about 10 p.m. Sunday when he struck a bear, according to the California Highway Patrol.

The man, who suffered a broken bone, was able to make it on his own to a nearby ranger station, said Steve Martarano, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Game. The man was then airlifted to Ventura County Medical Center in Ventura. His name was not released.

Hair was found in the radiator of the man's motorcycle, and authorities found bear tracks, but they did not locate the bear, Martarano said.

The area has a large population of black bears.
 
riding a dirt bike in the dark in the woods in bear country...i think this guy didn't have his helmet on straight...

but yes always be on the lookout for bears...we had what appeared to be a black bear cub in the woods behind the house yesterday...climbed a tree then got down and walked off...
 
riding a dirt bike in the dark in the woods in bear country...i think this guy didn't have his helmet on straight...

but yes always be on the lookout for bears...we had what appeared to be a black bear cub in the woods behind the house yesterday...climbed a tree then got down and walked off...

:D I'll second that ;sounds like trouble from the start even if you remove the Bear from the story line...
 
I had seen coyotes and other smaller critters that had been hit along that road.
I really like that area as it's about an hour drive for me but puts me in the middle of really rugged mountains with hardly any people.
 
Bobby Branton!

Come back and visit us here more often willya? Good to see you around here.
 
funny story since this thread was just posted...

about five minutes ago a big black bear just stomped through the woods in my direction (i was in the woods back of the house splitting up a small maple for some projects)...i started to head around the long way (there was a fence in the way of a straight line), and the bear started to go through the yard (going towards where i was planning on entering the yard. i quickly retreated and went into the house the way the bear was coming before. i realized when i hit the house that i had grabbed my cold steel LTC kukri and left all the other tools with the wood. the bear did a few more circles and is hainging out in the woods now. it has a tag on its ear, and its probably not too dangerous, but my heart jumped into my throat anyways...i think it might be looking for the cupb that was here yesterday, it was sniffing around the tree alot.
 
Some get hysterical at seeing a black bear . My closest contact was at about 8' .The bear totally ignored me !!! What a put down.
 
Some get hysterical at seeing a black bear . My closest contact was at about 8' .The bear totally ignored me !!! What a put down.

Similar story here. When taking a walk in the woods just last year, I turned around to find a black bear about 15' from me. He sniffed the air, then just kept moseying along. 'Guess I didn't smell too appetizing, lol.
 
We don't have too many bears here in Spain. I have seen a number of critters up in the mountains and a lot of them while driving at night in mountain/forrest roads but nothing as potentialy dangerous as a bear.

Bear have teeth and are bigger than me. That's what worries me. Same goes with sharks (I have seen a few while spear fishing), if they are bigger than me, I am out of there carefully. Anything bigger than three feet can really make a mess with you.

Mikel
 
I've seen more bears along the road where I backpack than in the woods.

That's because bears are quite lazy creatures and like to expend as little energy as possible.As such it's a lot easier to travel on a logging road or footpath than to break their own path through dense forest !!!
 
Here's a vicious attack in Quebec:

QUEBEC: HUSBAND CHASED AFTER 'AGGRESSIVE' ANIMAL

Black bear attacks and kills grandmother, 70, on fishing trip
KATE HAMMER

June 2, 2008

The husband of a 70-year-old grandmother who was killed by a bear in northern Quebec fearlessly chased the wild animal off his wife's battered body, according to family members.

Conservation experts set traps after Friday evening's attack, but according to police, as of last night, the bear was still at large in the wilds of northern Quebec.

Cecile Lavoie and Alexandre Lavoie, 73, were in remote country nearly 600 kilometres northwest of Ottawa, where the retirees often spent the weekend fishing or hunting deer.

According to her daughter, Ms. Lavoie felt at home in the woods and on the banks of the Theo River, where the bear attacked.

As she scouted a fishing hole for walleye, Ms. Lavoie became separated from her husband. Barely 10 minutes later, Mr. Lavoie felt something was amiss and went searching for his wife of 51 years. Metres away he came upon the nightmarish scene of her body being dragged into the forest by a bear.

Mr. Lavoie chased the predator for nearly 200 metres and managed very briefly to scare it away from his wife. He tried but was unable to carry her limp and bleeding body back through the dense spring foliage.

He left her and went for help. When he arrived with police, the bear had returned and was combative.

"The bear was still around and the bear was aggressive," said Sergeant Gregory Gomez del Prado, a spokesman for the Quebec provincial police. "It was dark so it was hard to find the woman's body."

The bear was so aggressive, police were forced to delay attempts to retrieve Ms. Lavoie's remains until early Saturday morning, after it retreated into the deep woods north of the small community of La Sarre.

Yesterday Ms. Lavoie's family gathered at her Beaucanton home. Mr. Lavoie, the retired owner of a logging machinery business his wife helped him build, is still in shock according to his daughter, Christine Lavoie.

"She was an angel," Christine said yesterday in a telephone interview. "Fishing and hunting were her favourite activities, she was in her paradise."

According to the Quebec Ministry of Natural Resources and Fauna website, black bears are the species most commonly found in Quebec. This species rarely attacks humans and only four people have been killed by black bears in that province over the past 25 years.

In 1991, a black bear killed a Toronto couple in Algonquin Park, baffling wildlife experts as it left the campers' food stores untouched.

In 2001, a high-school student was attacked and partly eaten by a black bear 25 kilometres northeast of Yellowknife.

In 2007, a Calgary woman, who was cycling on a trail near a British Columbia resort, was stalked and killed by a black bear.

Attacks sometimes occur in the spring when bears awake from hibernation and are hungry. According to wildlife experts, a long winter and large amounts of snow meant this year's hibernation season stretched a few weeks longer than usual.

In the event that one is approached by a black bear, the ministry website recommends moving slowly and avoiding eye contact in order to evade being identified as prey by the bear. Climbing a tree can be an effective way to escape attack.

According to her family, the attack on Ms. Lavoie happened so quickly she didn't even have time to scream, let alone reach for the bear spray she carried with her. As accomplished hunters and campers who were born and raised in northern Canada, the Lavoies were well-versed in the recommended tools for avoiding and dealing with bear attacks.

It remains unclear why the bear attacked Ms. Lavoie.

In addition to her husband, she leaves behind five children and 11 grandchildren
 
"Climbing a tree can be an effective way to escape attack."

bad advise...i saw a black bear shimmy up a tree in no time yesterday, and it was just a cub...i imagine an adult could do it twice as fast. whether a bear would actually go to that length to chase something is a different story, and i don't have experience there, but i would not recommend climbing a tree to get away from a tree climber...
 
We went bear hunting in Quebec one time. The guides had stands built in clumps of trees that looked like mini tree houses over bait stations. We were told NOT to come down until the guide returned for us even if we shot a bear.
I saw two skinny young bears the first day. The second day I climbed up to the stand and stepped in something sticky on the floor of the tree stand. It was dark so I cut on my light and there was a HUGE pile of bear crap 25' up in that tree stand.

:eek:

Suddenly I did not fell that safe. If it had not been for my 45-70 I would have felt down right EXPOSED.

Black bears can, and do, climb well.
 
Here's a vicious attack in Quebec:

QUEBEC: HUSBAND CHASED AFTER 'AGGRESSIVE' ANIMAL

Black bear attacks and kills grandmother, 70, on fishing trip
KATE HAMMER

June 2, 2008

The husband of a 70-year-old grandmother who was killed by a bear in northern Quebec fearlessly chased the wild animal off his wife's battered body, according to family members.

Conservation experts set traps after Friday evening's attack, but according to police, as of last night, the bear was still at large in the wilds of northern Quebec.

Cecile Lavoie and Alexandre Lavoie, 73, were in remote country nearly 600 kilometres northwest of Ottawa, where the retirees often spent the weekend fishing or hunting deer.

According to her daughter, Ms. Lavoie felt at home in the woods and on the banks of the Theo River, where the bear attacked.

As she scouted a fishing hole for walleye, Ms. Lavoie became separated from her husband. Barely 10 minutes later, Mr. Lavoie felt something was amiss and went searching for his wife of 51 years. Metres away he came upon the nightmarish scene of her body being dragged into the forest by a bear.

Mr. Lavoie chased the predator for nearly 200 metres and managed very briefly to scare it away from his wife. He tried but was unable to carry her limp and bleeding body back through the dense spring foliage.

He left her and went for help. When he arrived with police, the bear had returned and was combative.

"The bear was still around and the bear was aggressive," said Sergeant Gregory Gomez del Prado, a spokesman for the Quebec provincial police. "It was dark so it was hard to find the woman's body."

The bear was so aggressive, police were forced to delay attempts to retrieve Ms. Lavoie's remains until early Saturday morning, after it retreated into the deep woods north of the small community of La Sarre.

Yesterday Ms. Lavoie's family gathered at her Beaucanton home. Mr. Lavoie, the retired owner of a logging machinery business his wife helped him build, is still in shock according to his daughter, Christine Lavoie.

"She was an angel," Christine said yesterday in a telephone interview. "Fishing and hunting were her favourite activities, she was in her paradise."

According to the Quebec Ministry of Natural Resources and Fauna website, black bears are the species most commonly found in Quebec. This species rarely attacks humans and only four people have been killed by black bears in that province over the past 25 years.

In 1991, a black bear killed a Toronto couple in Algonquin Park, baffling wildlife experts as it left the campers' food stores untouched.

In 2001, a high-school student was attacked and partly eaten by a black bear 25 kilometres northeast of Yellowknife.

In 2007, a Calgary woman, who was cycling on a trail near a British Columbia resort, was stalked and killed by a black bear.

Attacks sometimes occur in the spring when bears awake from hibernation and are hungry. According to wildlife experts, a long winter and large amounts of snow meant this year's hibernation season stretched a few weeks longer than usual.

In the event that one is approached by a black bear, the ministry website recommends moving slowly and avoiding eye contact in order to evade being identified as prey by the bear. Climbing a tree can be an effective way to escape attack.

According to her family, the attack on Ms. Lavoie happened so quickly she didn't even have time to scream, let alone reach for the bear spray she carried with her. As accomplished hunters and campers who were born and raised in northern Canada, the Lavoies were well-versed in the recommended tools for avoiding and dealing with bear attacks.

It remains unclear why the bear attacked Ms. Lavoie.

In addition to her husband, she leaves behind five children and 11 grandchildren

hell yea this was in the papers the other day!!!

I camp not to far from there.... :thumbdn:
 
This happened in a national park that I go to quite a bit, I used to go offroading near Lockwood Valley road all the time. Wild story, I would never imagine this happening! (Quoted from local online news)

An off-road motorcyclist was injured late Sunday when he hit a bear, authorities said Monday.

The man was riding a dirt bike in the area of Lockwood Valley Road in Los Padres National Forest about 10 p.m. Sunday when he struck a bear, according to the California Highway Patrol.

The man, who suffered a broken bone, was able to make it on his own to a nearby ranger station, said Steve Martarano, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Game. The man was then airlifted to Ventura County Medical Center in Ventura. His name was not released.

Hair was found in the radiator of the man's motorcycle, and authorities found bear tracks, but they did not locate the bear, Martarano said.

The area has a large population of black bears.

Nice article
Is Lockwood Valley up off Hiway 33/OJAI
Near Pine MOuntain?
Rose Valley Falls?
 
Back
Top