[pct-l] bear bagging
Ryan Christensen
yosemiteryan at yahoo.com
Sun Jan 2 03:10:08 CST 2011
Kevin,
I have a feeling I may not be the only one to reply to your post-- but I suppose
I will be the first. I was one of those "pesky" rangers asking about bear cans.
From what you wrote, I can tell that perhaps you have not had the experience
with bears that many Rangers, including myself have had. At heart, Rangers, and
all these food storage regulations are there to save bears. Bears are absolutely
beautiful creatures with personality and a zest for life. When I worked in the
parks, I was not just hiking through the mountains-- I lived there. I got to
know the bears- their personalities, the quirks, their cubs, parents and
grandparents-- and gained a very different perspective. If you watch them and
pay attention they very much remind us of ourselves. I have a brief clip of a
video I took of a bear doing bear things here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwOTMfnFuc4 Its a little over halfway through
the video.
Ursacks were revoked because they have failed in real world situations in the
backcountry. I have had a visitor come out of the backcountry with a torn
Ursack-- then weeks later at the same location (on the PCT) get the report that
someone had to be helicoptered out because they were clawed by a bear-- then
hear the heart breaking story of the bear having to be hunted down and killed. I
have looked into the eyes of a mother bear in a trap, her cub crying next to
her, knowing she had to be killed because of the stupid decisions of visitors
before- who also came and went and did not care enough about the well being of
the bears to properly store their food. The point is: there is a direct
correlation between a bear getting human food for the first time- the bear
quickly becoming addicted to human food- the bear loosing their natural fear of
humans- then the bear becoming bolder and more aggressive in its efforts to
continue its addiction to human food-- this pattern continues until someone gets
hurt-- or have to be killed. Night after night, I have chased the same bear away
from food that people have left out-- to eventually learn that it too had to be
killed-- its three cubs shipped out to a Zoo. It is with a sense of compassion
and responsibility that we should be properly storing our food. In my opinion,
its not worth risking the life of a bear to save a few ounces, nor, IMHO is my
food important enough to me that it outweighs the life of a bear. Yes, we do
need containers with 100% impenetrability.
About defending your food from a bear: well, that's just simply a very, very bad
idea. That does seem to be a common denominator with many of the bear maulings I
am familiar with in the Sierra-- that and using your food as a pillow, which is
also a very, very bad idea. Know that not all bears are intemidated by rocks,
particularly the ones who have repeatedly gained food from careless
backpackers-- again, if you had more experience with bears I don't think you
would claim that they retreat when you throw stones, because many don't. Also,
be mindful of throwing those stones- years ago, in Yosemite, a boy scout killed
a bear when he threw a rock at the bear to protect his food. If your food was
properly stored to begin with then there would be no need to "protect" your
food.
For the Bears,
ProDeal
www.bristleconemedia.com
----- Original Message ----
From: Kevin <hikelite at gmail.com>
To: Melanie Clarke <melaniekclarke at gmail.com>
Cc: "pct-l at backcountry.net" <pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Sun, January 2, 2011 12:10:34 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] bear bagging
Hi Melanie
Here is the latest update from Ursack. I wish they would approve them. The
weight difference is huge. I think the agencies managing the backcountry are not
taking into account the hikers when making their decisions about what is
acceptable food protection. Yes, a bear could probably get into an Ursack
eventually. Do we need the 100% impenetrability of a rigid container? I don't
think so, but it's not up to me. I hung my food for many years without trouble.
Ill probably have a canister between KM and Echo Lakes, but it's not by choice.
http://www.ursack.com/ursack-update.htm
I haven't yet decided to borrow, rent, or buy. I'm still hoping the Ursack will
be approved for the small sections it's not yet allowed. What they aren't taking
into consideration is how important my food is to me! They base their tests on
allowing a bear unlimited attempts to get the food. When I hear the bear trying
to get my food, you can be sure I will defend it! When I used to hang my food, I
would put a pile of "bear rocks" next to me at night. I have yet to meet a bear
that thinks my food is worth getting pelted with rocks. They will just move on
to an easier reward. Bears are big, but they still retreat when you throw
stones. Now that I think about it, I bet that would work for pesky rangers
asking about me bear can. ;) I'm kidding about that last part, but it does make
a point. HEHE
I will reluctantly comply with the regulations, even if I don't like them.
Misspellings and typos brought to you by iPhone.
On Jan 1, 2011, at 8:00 PM, Melanie Clarke <melaniekclarke at gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear PCT, or Chuck,
>
> Why is the Ursack illegal? I loved the Ursack.
>
> Melanie
>
> On Sat, Jan 1, 2011 at 6:24 PM, CHUCK CHELIN <steeleye at wildblue.net> wrote:
>
>> Good evening, Mike,
>>
>>
>>
>> It is very rare to see any PCT hiker bag/hang food – anywhere. Doing so is
>> not allowed as a substitute for using an approved bear ‘can in designated
>> areas. The last time I bagged/hung food was on an Ontario canoe trip many
>> years ago. Usually I ditch the ‘can at Echo Summit south of Lake Tahoe,
>> but
>> once I did carry a non-approved Ursack for a while north of there because
>> there were some curious bears in that general area. Even then I didn't
>> hoist it up; I just tethered it at ground level to a small tree.
>>
>>
>>
>> On the remainder of the PCT north there are lots of bears but they keep
>> their heads down and a hiker will be lucky to see one.
>>
>>
>>
>> Steel-Eye
>>
>> Hiking the Pct since before it was the PCT – 1965
>>
>> http://www.trailjournals.com/steel-eye
>>
>> http://www.trailjournals.com/SteelEye09
>>
>>
>> On Sat, Jan 1, 2011 at 5:16 PM, Michael Pinkus <mikepinkus at hotmail.com
>>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Hi All,
>>> So, bear cannisters are required on some parts of the trail, I'm assuming
>>> that you bear bag it on the rest of the trail? I only ask this as I've
>> never
>>> read anything about it anywhere. We bear bag everywhere here in Canada
>>> unless you are camping when they're hibernating.
>>>
>>> anyone?
>>>
>>> cheers,
>>> Mike
>>>
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