ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Aug. 17, 2008

Anchorage Plagued By Bear Attacks

Three People Have Been Mauled By Black And Grizzly Bears This Summer

  • Alaska Fish and Game biologists Sean Farley, left, and Rick Sinnott walk past a warning sign as they look for a bear alone a path Far North Bicentennial Park in Anchorage, Alaska on Aug. 13, 2008, where a jogger and a bicyclist were attacked by a sow with two cubs this summer. Photo

    Alaska Fish and Game biologists Sean Farley, left, and Rick Sinnott walk past a warning sign as they look for a bear alone a path Far North Bicentennial Park in Anchorage, Alaska on Aug. 13, 2008, where a jogger and a bicyclist were attacked by a sow with two cubs this summer.  (AP PHOTO)

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(AP)  Even in a city whose logo is "Big Wild Life," the summer of 2008 is testing residents' tolerance for large carnivores.

The problem is bears, black bears and bigger grizzlies. So far this summer, three people have been mauled in the city.

Some people say humans are to blame for the confrontations and insist that no bears should be killed because of the attacks.

On the other side is a growing chorus of people like Devon Rees, who want something done about the big bruins.

"It is pretty much unsafe to walk around at night," he said.

On one recent evening, Rees heard splashing in the creek near his Eagle River home and assumed it was salmon. Seconds later, however, a bear rushed at him from the woods and knocked him to the ground.

"I wasn't going to lay down and take it. The bear came and tried to fight me," said Rees, 18, who works in a meat store. "I started punching it in the head, kicking it and elbowing it ... I was boxing him using one arm to defend, one arm to strike."

Residents share the municipality — covering more than 1 million acres and with more than 360,000 people — with more than 300 black bears and 50 to 60 grizzlies. Aggravating the problem is that Alaska's largest city is snug up against the half-million-acre Chugach State Park, the third largest state park in the United States.

"Chugach State Park is a bear factory. It pumps out bears every year," said Rick Sinnott, the area biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

When those bears are hungry, they come into the city to feed on salmon in its many creeks and streams, and Sinnott said that is not likely to change.

"They are going to be cheek to jowl with us forever," he said.

Sinnott said efforts are being made to expand the hunting of bears in Chugach. The state park was off limits to hunting grizzlies for 30 years. Last year, three permits were issued but hunters were unsuccessful.

Killing all the bears is not a consideration, Sinnott said.

"It is a state park. People that use the state park, they want to see bears there," he said.

People using the city parks need to practice some common sense, said Dave Parker, a 25-year-old resident of Wasilla, outside the municipality.

"The bears were here before we were," Parker said. "You don't go swimming in shark-infested waters and don't expect to be bit."

Alaska Fish and Game has received 500 to 600 bear complaint calls in Anchorage this summer, usually from people reporting a bear on their deck, in a neighbor's garbage or running through yards.

A week ago, runner Clivia Feliz was attacked by a sow with two cubs in Anchorage's Far North Bicentennial Park. She had stopped to consider the orange sign with a bear silhouette that warns people way from Rover's Run trail, which follows a salmon-rich stream. But then she saw a bicyclist head down the trail, so she did, too.

"The sow found her and beat her up pretty good," Sinnott said.

Feliz was bitten on her head and neck and suffered a collapsed lung.

Six weeks earlier, 15-year-old Petra Davis was attacked by a grizzly on the same trail at about 1:30 a.m. while competing in a 24-hour bike race. She was hospitalized and treated for a crushed trachea and partially severed carotid artery.

Sinnott said he was surprised anyone thought it was a good idea to hold an all-night bike race in a park known to have bears and along a creek filled with salmon.

"I was kind of dumbfounded," he said.

There have been at least four other close encounters within a half-mile in the park involving a sow with cubs, Sinnott said.

The city closed Rover's Run trail on Tuesday. Sinnott said the sow will be killed if she can be found, not an easy task in the 4,000-acre park. Motion-sensitive cameras have been installed on the trail. If the sow is caught, the cubs are likely headed to a zoo.

"Most of the people who are attacked in town don't want the bear killed. They recognize she is a mom defending her cubs," Sinnott said. "We just can't let her live there because she will attack again."

The city's wildlife problem isn't limited to bears.

Mike Vogel, a 51-year-old insurance agent, was stomped by a moose in 2003 on a popular city trail. A year later, a moose charged at him near the same location, so the 14-year resident of Anchorage shot and killed it.

"We need to kill some of these bears and we need to kill some of these moose," he said.

Vogel accuses Fish and Game of catering to "bunny huggers."

"I think the pecking order needs to be re-established with humans on top," he said. "What other city in the world has pernicious wildlife running around in its city parks?"

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment See all 31 Comments
by patriot12436 August 17, 2008 11:52 PM PDT
t
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by patriot12436 August 17, 2008 11:55 PM PDT
As usual the animals will lose the battle again. We take all the land from them and they have to survive where and on what they can.
Reply to this comment
by cbsfan73 August 17, 2008 11:59 PM PDT
Mike Vogel, a 51-year-old insurance agent, was stomped by a moose in 2003 on a popular city trail. A year later, a moose charged at him near the same location, so the 14-year resident of Anchorage shot and killed it.
"We need to kill some of these bears and we need to kill some of these moose," he said.

I don''t get it. Ir seems to me that insurance salesmen should be fair game...
Reply to this comment
by cbsfan73 August 18, 2008 12:00 AM PDT
Mike Vogel selfishly said:
"I think the pecking order needs to be re-established with humans on top," he said. "What other city in the world has pernicious wildlife running around in its city parks?

Hey Mike, why don''t you go back to where you came from?
Reply to this comment
by blackyowe August 18, 2008 12:14 AM PDT
If people would stop being so foolish these things could be avoided most of the time like the bike race on a creek at night! It''s stupid. We never even had all night races of any kind when I was young, its idiotic!
Reply to this comment
by cbsfan73 August 18, 2008 12:23 AM PDT
"The bears were here before we were," Parker said. "You don''t go swimming in shark-infested waters and don''t expect to be bit."

AMEN
Reply to this comment
by summarex August 18, 2008 2:13 AM PDT
Obviously the bears are separatists! It''s no coincidence this all happened around the time the Russians went into Georgia. Will they now come into Alaska to protect the bears?
Reply to this comment
by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 3:00 AM PDT
As a general rule, "Live and let live" works. However, that being said, when a human is assaulted, they have the right to defend themselves. I don''t condone ruthless killings, but we have a right to exist too. Out of all of Northern Canada, to say nothing about Alaska sizewise, humans and bears (and moose to boot), should co-exist and find a natural balance and respect for eachother.
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by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 3:04 AM PDT
And just who was the crack-brained slave driver that thought it was a good idea to hold a 24 hour bicycle race through known bear infested territory? What was he/she on, pray tell?
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by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 3:22 AM PDT
After consideration, I realize Reverse Darwinism actually works. Survival of the idiotic. Only a fool fights in a burning house. Only an idiot gets near bears in their natural habitat. For reference, see the late Timothy Treadwell, RIP.
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by irliberal August 18, 2008 3:32 AM PDT
"We need to kill some of these bears and we need to kill some of these moose," he said.

I don''''t get it. Ir seems to me that insurance salesmen should be fair game...

Posted by cbsfan73 at 11:59 PM

Totally agreed. We''re just an animal of a different type. We''ve fooled ourselves into thinking we''re superior, special, privileged.

We''re more intelligent (most of the time) and have a few other advantages, but that''s all. The dividing line between humans and animals is MUCH closer than most are comfortable believing.
Reply to this comment
by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 3:43 AM PDT
Most people are either blind or deceiving themselves about our importance. We CAN be superior, but it behooves us to act with restraint. With great power, comes great responsibility, correct?
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by irliberal August 18, 2008 3:47 AM PDT
Most people are either blind or deceiving themselves about our importance. We CAN be superior, but it behooves us to act with restraint. With great power, comes great responsibility, correct?

Posted by Pinewalker at 03:43 AM

Totally agreed.
Reply to this comment
by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 3:50 AM PDT
**** Sapiens has a long blood soaked history of decimating other species. Now we are no longer content with being masters of our world. We now wage unbridled war with eachother. It is no suprise that humans find conflict with the other indigenous life on our world. We, (humans) by and large are the most viscious creature ever evolved. May *** have mercy on our souls.
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by patriot12436 August 18, 2008 4:24 AM PDT
pinewalker
Who ever planned the bike rally probably made them wear a pork chop around their necks so they could be identified as contestants. Sure would give an incentive to speed up.
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by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 4:27 AM PDT
LOL...I was just wondering if the co-ordinator/s of this race immersed the contestants in fish guts or cow blood in order to help the contestants along... ha.ha.ha... Seriously, what were they thinking???
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by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 4:34 AM PDT
No, honestly I must attest that a serious lapse of judgement by the co-ordinator/s of this race has occured and I derive no humor or pleasure at victims'' expense. Please, I implore you all, use common sense, which apparently is not so common.
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by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 4:38 AM PDT
I must confess, while not in Alaska, I live in Northern Maine where we live with black bears, moose, and even salmon. It is not impossible to enjoy the outdoors without conflict with the local wildlife.
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by sistatee-2009 August 18, 2008 4:46 AM PDT
Why don''t they start drilling for oil there, and all the bears will die.
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by pinewalker-2009 August 18, 2008 5:07 AM PDT
Yeah lets kill the bears...thats what humans do!!!
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by airboatboy August 18, 2008 6:09 AM PDT
"Feliz was bitten on her head...". Is this where the expression "bear in mind" came from?
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by tubicha August 18, 2008 6:18 AM PDT
lets make some iron puppet with humans shape fast on the ground with a spring and charged with some 50,000
volts when the bear atacks will be hit pretty hard and place some several in differets places on thoses trails they''ll learn to keep clear from humans
Reply to this comment
by gramto8 August 18, 2008 7:33 AM PDT
I thought all the bears were helplessly swimming in the ocean due to global warming, I guess I was wrong.

Posted by gunfighter51 at 07:24 AM : Aug 18, 2008

Yep, leave it to a right-wingnut to not know that some bears have never even SEEN an ocean!
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by tootall10142 August 18, 2008 7:39 AM PDT
You live in thier yard they will sh---t on your grass.You can move im sure they wont mind.
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by oleander8 August 18, 2008 8:47 AM PDT
Every attack in this article appears to be a result of less than wise human conduct. Go Bears!
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by gop_forever August 18, 2008 9:18 AM PDT
God is sending these bears to maul sinners in his constant quest to cleanse the Earth of sin.
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by usclimey August 18, 2008 1:28 PM PDT
I have zero sympathy with people to move to the wilderness to get away from urban life and then *** and moan about getting too close to bears, pumas, elk, moose etc. Personally I think it should be open season on humans year round in these areas, and bears should be armed.
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by three-o-six August 18, 2008 2:03 PM PDT
usclimey
You are a dreamer -- this is ANCHORAGE, Alaskan their capital -- not some place in the booneys. You''ve never been to Alaska?? I am always armed with a large caliber hand gun when I hike in bear country. If the noise from the first shot doesn''t scare them away at least I''ll have a fighting second chanse with the next round aimed to kill.
Reply to this comment
by usclimey August 18, 2008 2:23 PM PDT
usclimey
You are a dreamer -- this is ANCHORAGE, Alaskan their capital -- not some place in the booneys. You''''ve never been to Alaska?? I am always armed with a large caliber hand gun when I hike in bear country. If the noise from the first shot doesn''''t scare them away at least I''''ll have a fighting second chanse with the next round aimed to kill.

Posted by three-o-six

I don''t give a bleep whether it''s Anchorage or downtown *** - the bears were there first; you are infinging on their territory so they should have the right to life. And yes, I feel the same way about alligators in Florida, mountain lions in Colorado, rattlesnakes in Texas and moose in Maine.
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by cdegolier August 18, 2008 4:06 PM PDT
Stay out of the woods if you don''t want to be attacked.
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by deacon20081 August 18, 2008 4:09 PM PDT
Wear a Bell on a chain and Carry Pepper Spray in the woods! When you see Bear Poo, look closely, if it has berries and stuff it''s a Black Bear....if you smell Pepper Spray and find a Bell...it is a Grizzly Bear Pile.
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