BC man kills attacking bear with stick!

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http://www.bclocalnews.com/error/?c=y&errorURL=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bclocalnews.com%2Fbc_caribo...%2F30524704.html

My mom just heard this on the radio, thought I'd share it. There was another attack on Vancouver island, a bear attacked a fisherman in his boat.
Be careful out there! Both were black bears, luckily. My mom thought they said grizzley but I knew no way you are killing a grizzley with a stick.

http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080910/BC_bear_attack_080910/20080910?hub=CTVNewsAt11




By Carole Rooney
Free Press staff

Walking softly in bear territory may not be a good idea, but carrying a big stick certainly is -- when you're as brave as Jim West, that is.
West was out walking alone with his dogs in the forest behind the gymkhana grounds near Green Lake early Saturday afternoon when he was attacked by a black bear.
"I was looking for moose signs because my stepson has a limited entry tag," he said in an interview shortly after the incident.
As they strolled along facing into the wind, West was calling out to his black labs, Shadow and Chopper, who were happily flushing grouse and wagging their tails.
"All of a sudden I heard a kind of a huff and a growl off to my right, and when I turned around there was a bear six feet away. I had no opportunity to hit the ground like I should, so I just started to kick it in the face. It jumped up and took a snap at my face, split my upper lip, and then I hit the ground, and it jumped on top of me, tore my scalp and bit my left arm."
At this point the dogs came back and managed to distract the bear, so it proceeded to go after them. As soon as West moved, the bear attacked him again, putting him back on the ground a second time, and cutting his right arm. Then the dogs intervened again and West heard one of them yelp.
"I just jumped up and grabbed a stick, and the bear turned around and came running right at me and I hit it once; it started to shake its head, and I just kept swinging like it was a sledgehammer and I ended up crushing it's skull."
Once the conservation officer who attended the scene had confirmed the bear was indeed dead from blows to the head, he told West that he believed no one had ever done this before.
"I don't know why, it was the easiest thing in the world to do -- when you have a choice of either living or dying. I felt that I'd been on the ground twice and, if I went down a third time, I wouldn't get up. I wasn't gonna go down, so I just starting swinging."
Once West observed blood running from the bear's nose, he knew the job was done and the bear was dead or dying, so he dropped the stick and told his dogs it was time to go. After walking at least a kilometre back to his truck with his shirt wrapped around his head to stem the bleeding, West then drove himself and his dogs to nearby Little Horse Lodge, arriving at around 2 p.m.
"Jim came in and said 'I just got attacked by a bear, so call 9-1-1,'" said Ellie Scott of Little Horse Lodge. "I helped with First Aid, and to patch him up and calm him down -- he was in shock."
Luckily, although his home is in the area, West remained rational enough to stop at the lodge, in case emergency personnel had trouble finding his place.
The conservation officers attending the scene went out immediately to search for the bear and subsequently found two cubs as well, which were put down. The conservation officers' Predator Attack Team will be investigating the incident, including a necropsy (animal autopsy) to be performed on the sow within the next couple of weeks.
Ambulance and First Responders arrived approximately half hour after the 9-1-1 call and transported West to hospital, where he received 60 stitches to his scalp, face, left arm (in three places), right arm and lip.
"I haven't been able to find any injuries on my dogs. I think one of them may have been cuffed with a paw, so I'm going to check them out again later -- right now they are pretty excited to see me," said West on Sunday, just shortly after returning home from picking up his large Labs, who were looked after by Scott and her family at the lodge while he was in hospital.
The conservation officer told him he was very lucky to have survived such an attack.
"In that sort of situation, you only one choice -- it's live or die." said West. "Most people are too scared to think about living."
West doesn't think of himself as overly tough, however, and maintains the belief that for anyone placed in that situation, "it's just a matter of whether you want to live or not."
It also doesn't hurt, though, to have strength, courage -- and carry a big stick.
 
The conservation officers attending the scene went out immediately to search for the bear and subsequently found two cubs as well, which were put down.
Why were the Cubs put down,I read this twice and I am not sure of why ?
 
I guess all the zoos are full? I have heard of this before, I guess it's not like adopting a stray dog, it's a lot of work, though some people do it.
 
i suppose the cubs were put down because there was nowhere to take them that could nurse them and raise them up. the only other option was to let them starve to death.

it's an impressive story. typical of successful survivor psychology - they accept the situation for what it is and act.
 
The conservation officers attending the scene went out immediately to search for the bear and subsequently found two cubs as well, which were put down.
Why were the Cubs put down,I read this twice and I am not sure of why ?

I am not a bear expert but how long do bears nurse? Is it possible they would have died anyway without the mom?

Too bad if so. Sounds like he just got unknowingly too close to the cubs? Or maybe the dogs hunting freaked it out.
 
Man all the wood I pick up around here would have snapped the first time it hit the bear !!!!
 
Jim West...

...as played by Will Smith or Robert Conrad?

Now who now has the Wild Wild West theme song in their heads?
 
There was no rational reason to kill the poor cubs. Plenty of wild life shelters and volunteers would be willing to care of them, till they are ready to be reintroduced in their habitat again...
 
There was no rational reason to kill the poor cubs. Plenty of wild life shelters and volunteers would be willing to care of them, till they are ready to be reintroduced in their habitat again...

Then the bears would be too familiar with humans and would be much more likely to cause problems in the future.
 
I found this in another article on the attack.
Conservation officers who found the dead bear told him it was unnaturally, overly aggressive.

The mama bear's two cubs had to be put down in case the aggression had been passed down in their genes, he said.

I've heard some strange things in my day but that's near the top of the list. I don't understand the logic at all.
 
I found this in another article on the attack.

I've heard some strange things in my day but that's near the top of the list. I don't understand the logic at all.

Yeah I don't buy that. Exactly how aggressive should a mamma bear be if you accidentally stumble with in a few feet of her cubs. He might of been inbetween the cubs and the sow, which would provoke the attack.
 
Cubs stay with the Mother over a year...IIRC, and the cubs that are raised by humans, will more than likely not survive in the wild. This is not a realistic endeavor..it is sad, the mother was more than likely defending her cubs..just a bad deal. I am glad the guy survived, and sounds like he has one hard swing! Gene
 
When I read this all I could think of was Walking Tall with the Rock
WalkingTall1.jpg


Sad to hear that about the cubs but it prolly was the most humane thing that could have been done.
 
I followed a couple of other links after I read the article: bigfoot sightings, and another bear who went into a Subways -- they got a video camera picture of that one, waiting at the counter. :)
 
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