Near
Alaska's largest city, a right way and a wrong way to view bears | Alaska
DispatchNear Alaska's Largest City, a Right Way and a Wrong Way
to View Bears
Rick Sinnott / Alaska Dispatch / May 15, 2012
Picture this. A brown bear saunters out of the brush along a highway. A
car pulls over, followed by a pickup truck. Passengers jump out to take
snapshots. They edge closer, crowding the bear, deriving comfort from
numbers and their self-possessed superiority over other animals. Soon a bear jam
is forming, with more vehicles veering off the road and more people snatching
cameras and leaving common sense behind.
All of them have seen close-up footage of bears on television filmed by
professionals with telephoto lenses. But these people are not
professionals.
The scene I’ve described has happened multiple times in
the past three weeks. The road is not in Yellowstone National Park. It’s the
Seward Highway, on the north side of Turnagain Arm, a few miles
from Anchorage. And these people are not tourists. Judging from their
license plates, most of them are us, the Locals.
The brown bear was
recently seen near Rainbow. Jessy Coltrane and Dave Battle, wildlife biologists
with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, responding to a call for assistance
from a park ranger, removed a dead dog from a wooded ditch between the
parking lot and the highway. The dog, a Labrador retriever, had been shot and
dumped in the ditch. Despite the ripe odor of decaying flesh, which
surely attracted the bear, most of the earlier bear viewers seemed to be
unaware that they were standing outside their vehicles between a brown bear and
its lunch.
Suicide by cop is a colloquial term for what happens when a
suicidal person deliberately threatens a law enforcement officer, provoking a
lethal response. The phenomenon has engendered other clever expressions:
death-by-cop, copicide, officer-assisted suicide, and victim-precipitated
homicide.
What expression can we adopt for people who deliberately
threaten a bear?
Most brown bear attacks are the result of a surprise
encounter. Often the person is moving relatively quietly through an area with
poor visibility. It’s brushy or dark. The bear isn’t paying a lot of attention.
Or it has a young cub that can’t move out of the way fast enough. Or the
bear is feeding on a large carcass, like that of a winter-killed moose. And the
person almost literally stumbles into the bear.
Surprise encounters are
exacerbated by fast-moving people, runners and bikers. As horrible as they are
to contemplate, bear attacks are rare.
But here we have the spectacle of
a wad of people edging closer and closer to a brown bear feeding in plain sight
along the Seward Highway.
People threaten bears. Think about it from the
bear’s perspective. You’ve been huddled in a den for six months without snacks.
Now you’re trying to mind your own business, grabbing a bite to eat from
the vegetation that greens up first along the side of the road while you
wait for a chance at the main course, the dead dog. And then along comes Mary.
And Tom, Dick and Harry. All converging on your tiny bit of turf, moving
deliberately closer. And closer.
Doesn’t that seem a little threatening
to you?
Up close and personal
Close-range bear viewing and photography works in places like Katmai
National Park and Preserve and McNeil River State Game Sanctuary where bears are
somewhat habituated to people, at least in that setting. Rules in these
dedicated bear-viewing areas actively discourage close approaches, bears are not
allowed to obtain human food, and rangers or guides monitor the behavior of
visitors and bears.
But this bear on Turnagain Arm is not habituated to
people. There is no one on scene with the presence of mind or authority to tell
everyone to step away from the bear. No one knew whether it had been fed by
people and therefore might be tempted to approach or even break into a vehicle.
It is the wildest of wild bears. It may tolerate humans up to a point, but every
wild bear is surrounded by an invisible bubble. If someone steps inside the
bubble, the bear will flee or charge.
Doug O’Harra witnessed defensive
threats at one of the encounters. The bear was approached by at least a half
dozen people. It became agitated and hop-charged one amateur photographer,
huffing and warning him to back off. Another man circled uphill behind the
bear and was bluff charged. The bear finally retreated back up the
mountain.
And, in fact, this bear has eaten food handled by humans.
Earlier in May, near Mile 111, it found a pile of salmon dumped near the highway
and a can of salmon left open for bears to eat, according
to Coltrane.
A series of long-range photographs taken by Helen
O’Harra documented one of the scenes along Turnagain Arm. I see a loose phalanx
of cars and pickup trucks. The bear is within feet of a compact sport-utility
vehicle. People are smiling. I see one fellow, who appears to be reclining
against the side of his pickup bed, pressing his point-and-shoot camera to his
face a little more than a car length from the bear. If someone had startled
the bear by making a loud noise or tossing a beer can at it, it could have
dragged Mr. Point-and-Shoot down in less time than it took to focus his silly
camera. I see a young mother in the crowd holding a large purse and
balancing her one-year-old child on her hip.
Predictably, now there’s
talk of shooting the bear to protect the public. It’s not afraid of people. It’s
getting too close to children.
My nightmare
I have a recurring dream of the future of bears in Anchorage. It’s
nothing like the vision I’ve expressed before, the one where people and bears
can continue to coexist with a little give and take on both sides, the one
where I try to explain to people that bears are a lot less dangerous than motor
vehicles.
My new vision is this: I see the last remaining bear in
Anchorage surrounded by a bunch of haphazardly parked vehicles disgorging a
crowd of people toting cameras, food, and kids. I see a law
enforcement officer try to disperse the crowd. I see the bear shot to
protect people who don’t have enough sense to differentiate between a bear on
television and the real thing, people unable to comprehend that they
have parked their lives a heartbeat away from the world’s largest
terrestrial predator.
That’s right, my dream is a
nightmare.
Rick Sinnott is a former Alaska Department of Fish
and Game wildlife biologist. The views expressed here are the writer's own and
are not necessarily endorsed by Alaska Dispatch. Contact him at
rickjs...@gmail.com
