Parks Canada says a bear attack in Alberta’s Banff National Park has left two people dead.

  • CForsyth@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    32
    ·
    9 months ago

    Jumping in to try to translate from Banff Park Staff lingo.

    Bears do become more aggressive once they become desensitized to humans and human activity. I think of it as territorly aggressive. It’s a powerful and wild animal either way.

    • IphtashuFitz@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      15
      ·
      9 months ago

      When my wife and I visited Banff & Jasper back before the pandemic we encountered a park ranger at a trailhead that was enforcing a requirement that hiking groups be a minimum of three people since a black bear was known to be in the area. They apparently felt 3+ hikers in a group would make enough noise to dissuade bears from approaching.

      We were also told of a bear that they had recently been forced to euthanize. They had determined that the bear had either been deliberately fed by a hiker with a backpack or had seen a backpacker drop some food. Whatever the case, the bear had associated backpackers with food and would accost almost every backpacker it saw. If you didn’t have a backpack it would leave you alone… Apparently once a bear learns about a food source it will always remember it. The park rangers had tried everything they could think of to discourage the bear, from bear spray (mace) to beanbag guns to tranquilizing it & relocating it. But it kept returning to the area and approaching backpackers, so they eventually had to put it down.