Bear attack

Really neat. I don't know if I'd have to play dead......
 
Sure sounded like this guys knows his stuff. I also dought that I'd have to play dead. I'm sure that the hot steaming load in the back of my pants would repel any bear.:eek: :D
 
It's also worth reading the book Bear Attacks: Their Causes and Avoidance, by Stephen Herrero.
 
Sounds like he has encapsulated every known proper technique I have heard about bear attacks except one.

My understanding is that playing dead is the proper technique for a brown bear. Fighting isn't going make a difference anyway. If it wants to eat you you are lunch. Hopefully (s)he is just going to chew on you a little to let you know who is boss and then go away. A black bear is different. If they are chewing on you its a predatory attack and you are on the menu. Fight for your life. Fighting hard against a black may get it to stop and leave.

KR
 
Canoeist stabs bear to death in Ontario
Last Updated: Saturday, July 22, 2006 | 8:34 PM ET
CBC News
A man stabbed a black bear to death with a 15-cm hunting knife, saying he knew he would otherwise become "lunch" after it attacked him and his dog on a canoeing portage in northern Ontario.

Tom Tilley, a 55-year-old from Waterloo, Ont., said his American Staffordshire dog Sam growled a warning, then rushed to his defence as the bear came at them on a trail north of Wawa on Friday.



Tom Tilley and his dog, shown in an undated photo, escaped an attack by a black bear while portaging near Wawa, Ont.
(Waterloo Region Record/Canadian Press)
As Sam battled with the nearly 90-kilogram bear, Tilley jumped on its back and stabbed it with his knife.

"Love is a very powerful emotion and my thought right away was: 'You're not going to kill my dog,'" Tilley told the Waterloo Region Record.

"I really consider my dog a hero. Without that first warning, I would have had the bear clamping down on my neck."

Continue Article

An avid outdoorsman, Tilley was four days into a 12-day canoe trip. He said he heard Sam growl and noticed the bear closing in on him. He waved his arms and slowly backed away. But the bear came closer, cutting off his escape route.

"That's when I knew I had a serious problem.… I was lunch," he said. "The bear took a few steps down the trail and clamped its mouth on the back of my dog. It gave me the quick opportunity I needed to run around to the back of the bear, get on its back and with my knife start stabbing it."

After making sure the animal was dead, Tilley realized that both he and dog had been bitten.

'That's when I knew I had a serious problem.… I was lunch.'
-Tom Tilley, a 55-year-old from Waterloo, Ont.He dragged his canoe across a short portage and paddled for about an hour before he came across a pair of Americans who had a satellite phone. They called for help and two hours later, a cargo plane arrived to take Tilley and Sam to Wawa for medical attention.

Tilley was released from hospital after being treated for minor injuries. Sam is also expected to make a full recovery from his minor injuries.

Bears rarely attack humans, but there have been several killings and serious maulings in Canada in recent years, including:

In late April, a grizzly attacked and killed Jean-Francois Pagé, a 28-year-old man from Whitehorse who was working in the bush about 230 kilometres northeast of the Yukon city.
Jacqueline Perry, 30, was killed by a black bear that attacked her and her husband at a campsite in Missinaibi Lake Provincial Park in northern Ontario in September 2005.
Isabelle Dube, a 26-year-old mother of one, died in June 2005 after being mauled by a grizzly bear while she and friends were running on a hiking trail near Canmore, Alta.

just would like to add this being a knife forum.
 
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