
READ this information carefully. Your behaviour affects the survival of wildlife and your own safety.


These photos were taken by remote cameras. They demonstrate how bears and people live in and use the same areas of national parks.
Bear attacks are uncommon. Wild animals generally prefer to avoid people and bears are no exception. Most encounters between bears
and people occur when the bear's natural avoidance behaviour shifts to aggression because of the following factors:
The following guidelines to safety in bear habitat are just that guidelines. Bear behaviour is hard to predict because they are complex animals. Each bear is an individual with the potential to react differently in different situations. The information that follows will give you some basics on how to avoid an encounter in the first place and guidance on how to react should one occur.
Parks Canada recommends carrying bear spray with you at all times on the trail.
Bear Spray
Research indicates that bear spray can be effective with some bears when used properly. If you plan to carry it, be aware that wind, spray distance, rain, freezing temperatures and product shelf life can all influence its effectiveness. Familiarize yourself with the proper use of bear spray (including the manufacturer's specific instructions) and keep it readily accessible. However, the best way to live safely with bears is to avoid contact with them.
Bears are extremely sensitive to the stress of human activity. You can actually help protect these animals by avoiding encounters with them.
Make noise!
Watch for fresh bear sign.
Keep your dog on a leash at all times.
Travel in groups.
Never approach a bear. (Always maintain a distance of at least 100 metres).
Stay calm
Get your bear spray ready
Speak to the bear
Back away slowly, NEVER run
Visitor Centre staff can provide information on current bear activity, closures, warnings and safety advice.
Most encounters with bears end without injury. If a bear actually makes contact, you may increase your chances of survival by following these guidelines. In general, there are 2 kinds of attack:
PLAY DEAD. Lie on your stomach with legs apart and position your arms so that your hands are crossed behind your neck. This position makes you less vulnerable to being flipped over and protects your face, the back of your head and neck. Remain still until you are sure the bear has left the area.
These defensive attacks are generally less than two minutes in duration. If the attack continues, it may mean the attack has shifted from defensive to predatory - FIGHT BACK!
FIGHT BACK! Intimidate that bear: shout; hit it with a branch or rock, do whatever it takes to let the bear know you are not easy prey. This kind of attack is very rare but it is serious because it usually means the bear is looking for food and preying on you.
Bottom line? It is very difficult to predict the best strategy to use in the event of a bear attack. That is why it is so important to put thought and energy into avoiding an encounter in the first place.
Your speed and quietness put you at risk for sudden bear encounters.
To stay safe and protect wilderness, travel with two goals in mind: limiting your impact by avoiding encounters and managing your food, food smells and garbage.

Bears are as individual as the members of your family...and so are their survival strategies. All bears in the mountains face similar challenges each season but each animal survives in its own particular way. What does it take to survive each year?
SPRING
Bears emerge lean from hibernation, onto a lean landscape.
There's snow at high elevations so bears congregate in valley bottoms
to find early green-up. Grizzly bears head to sunny, exposed avalanche slopes
to dig for roots and bulbs. If they're lucky, bears may find carcasses
of winter-killed animals a critical energy boost, especially for a female
nursing cubs.
Males seek out available mates...often travelling great distances.
The grizzly male's urge to reproduce is strong but females don't hit breeding age until around 5 years old and it may be another 5-6 years before they're ready to breed again. To secure food and available mates, a male's home range may be as large as greater Vancouver. Black bears also have low reproductive rates when habitat quality is poor.
SUMMER
As snow retreats, plants flourish and bears range widely to find these green pockets.
Avalanche slopes remain critical to grizzly bears offering a rich variety of plant food and forest edge
that provides cover. Black bears, a forest species, remain largely in the valley bottoms where they
find food, and security from grizzly bears.
Bears are devoted mothers.
Here in the Rockies, grizzly bear cubs may remain with their mothers for up to 5 years learning the
ropes for survival in the mountains. Female grizzlies aggressively defend their cubs from dominant
male bears and other threats. Black bear cubs are ushered up trees for protection from adult black
bear males and grizzly bears.
FALL
Bears are driven to consume up to 35,000 calories per day.
Bears dig, push, rub and peel their way through an area looking for food.
This behaviour leaves behind interesting clues large diggings (ground squirrels
and roots) turned over rocks and logs (insects), berry bushes that have been
stripped clean (up to 250,000 berries/day in peak season). The focus is feeding
along forest openings, trails, road edges and in campgrounds sometimes around
the clock.
WINTER
Bears give birth in mid-winter...if they're fat enough.
Both black and grizzly adult females have a physical adaptation called "delayed
implantation" the fertilized egg doesn't implant in the uterus unless
the female has enough fat reserves to grow and nurse cubs. Born into a secure
den environment, the tiny, blind cubs (usually two) suckle on their sleeping
mother's rich milk.
Bears can live to be 25 years old in the wild. Unfortunately many die human-caused deaths well before this, cutting short their legacy of future offspring. To maintain a population, births must balance deaths. Grizzly bears have the lowest reproductive rate of any mammal in North America.
Black and grizzly bears have evolved physical adaptations over millions of years and an intelligence that gives them a fighting chance to make a living here. But times are changing. Rapidly. The growing population of humans, increasing development, resource extraction activities and recreational access are all carving up and eating away wilderness.
Bears need the habitat in the Rocky Mountain national parks more than ever but it's become a kind of obstacle course. Think of what it would be like to travel around the mountain national parks in midsummer, trying to avoid people around towns; campgrounds; highways; railways; busy trail networks... and still find enough food to survive.
It's becoming harder for bears to avoid bumping into people even in our parks. These protected areas are an important part of the remaining habitat for black and grizzly bears in North America.

We breathe in mountain air like a tonic but bears read it like an invisible map. Their keen sense of smell helps them negotiate the landscape, guiding them to food and away from possible threats.
The first time, the second time, the third time....
A bear has two options and a coping strategy.
The cumulative effects of humans on bears:
removal/killing of habituated bears
resort and housing development
growing human population
road and rail mortality
resource extraction
timber harvesting
road access
recreation
poaching
hunting
Your personal decisions count. It only takes three seconds to consider the impact you may be having on bears and to make a different decision that can help protect bears.
The best thing you can do for bears is to limit their exposure to you. When you spot a roadside bear, consider not stopping (one less person contributing to its habituation). When you're in campgrounds, bear-proof your site and keep it completely attractant-free: take the extra 3 seconds to move the hibachi into the trunk, the dog food bowls into the car or the suntan lotion into the locker.
Before you hit the trail think about the time of year, what the bears are probably doing and how you can give them the room they need to do it. Use official trails only and leave the wild trails to wildlife. Respect temporary and seasonal closurestheyre in place to give bears a chance to use critical habitat or habitat linkages undisturbed.
Bottom line? To survive, bears need space with few human surprises.
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