![]()
|
|||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Black
bear seen near Ranch It's been a couple
of years since a bear was caught marauding around Black Butte Ranch, but
last Thursday, June 5, one was spotted running across the highway just outside
the Ranch gate.
Jean Miller, wife of the late
Ralph Miller, 1980s-90s basketball coach at Oregon State University, had
just turned onto Highway 20 toward Sisters from the Black Butte Ranch
entrance when a "medium-sized black bear ran right out in front of my
car," she said.
"I had to jam on the brakes
to keep from hitting it. I was so shook up that I pulled off onto the
side of the road to calm down," Miller said.
The bear "kind of ambled across
the highway and headed up toward Black Butte," she said.
According to the Oregon Department
of Fish and Wildlife, there are about 25,000 bears in our state, mostly
on the western slope of the Cascades or in the coastal mountains.
Between 1996 and 2001, 1,031
bears were destroyed officially, mostly for foraging on private land or
eating the bark and killing commercial trees.
"We do not try to relocate
them if they become a habitual neighborhood nuisance as they will simply
find another residential area in which to forage for food," a department
report said.
Females will generally weigh
175 pounds with males going 275 pounds. They will live about 20 years
and roam in an area of 10 to 100 square miles.
This relatively small area
means that the bear Jean Miller saw is probably still nearby.
According to the ODFW report,
"The black bear has been know to run 35 miles per hour and is generally
dangerous to humans only if trapped."
Black bears in Oregon are
usually black in color, while in other areas some have a honey color tending
to brown.
They have very sharp, curved
claws which help them climb trees and, in general, they are good swimmers.
This means, despite the cartoons,
people should not climb a tree to try to escape a bear, nor jump in a
lake.
Bears have good eyesight and
an acute nose.
ODFW suggest that if confronted
by a bear, one should speak softly to it so it knows you are not a foe
and leave the area by backing away slowly.
"Do not make any sudden movements
and do not make eye contact, as this is threatening," the report says.
If the bear has cubs, try
to keep from getting between mother and babies.
In the rare event of an attack,
fight back.
"Bears have been known to
run when hit with rocks or fists or binoculars," according to the report.
Miller said that, "my bear
came within 20 feet of my car and seemed to pay no attention to me whatsoever
as it crossed the highway.
"It appeared to have come
from the meadow with the aspen trees just east of Black Butte Ranch,"
she said.
More information on "Living
with Wildlife in Bear Country" may be found at www.dfw.state.or.us/springfield/Bear.htm.
|
|
|||||||