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bear protocol for winter camping
Posted:
Wed Jan 05, 2011 11:43 pm
by ExploretheWorld
okay, so I know bears are supposed to be hibernating this time of year. my question is what is the protocol for food storage in grizzly country during the winter? I assumed it was nil and recently ignored food storage warnings in GTNP because of it. However, upon thinking about this and reading a couple pages on here, it seems like there is some concern. pages advising hikers to store food, hang, take every precaution during winter as a bear may be out stretching their legs...
what say you summitpost?
Nick
Re: bear protocol for winter camping
Posted:
Thu Jan 06, 2011 12:11 am
by lcarreau
Hey, Nick ? Bears typically don't WANT to stretch their legs in winter.
But, that doesn't mean you can't take the usual precautions, because then you'll develop a safer attitude for when the bears DO come to stretch their legs.
Re: bear protocol for winter camping
Posted:
Fri Jan 07, 2011 7:29 pm
by ExploretheWorld
in that case, at what temperature and/or time or allignment of the planets do the bears resurface from their seasonal hiatus of foraging?
Re: bear protocol for winter camping
Posted:
Fri Jan 07, 2011 7:43 pm
by Doublecabin
Grizzlies are not true hibernators. Sows may stay in with cubs for months but I've been told others might "stretch" every 6 weeks or less. I would guess some need to hydrate more than anything else.
Where I'm at they seem to prefer to den on cold, timbered N. Facing Slopes.
I wonder what the oods are of a bear coming out at night as opposed to a warmer day?
Re: bear protocol for winter camping
Posted:
Mon Jan 17, 2011 3:03 am
by chugach mtn boy
I know they theoretically come out in winter from time to time, and a very unlucky electrical worker was mauled by one on the Kenai peninsula a few winters back (daytime attack), but I've just never seen bear tracks in the snow in mid-winter--have you DC? If they come out, I doubt they venture far. And the odds are probably lowest in Jan/Feb--no more late denners out, and the ones with inadequate fat reserves hopefully haven't run out of fat yet, so just about everyone should be snug in their dens.
Re: bear protocol for winter camping
Posted:
Wed Jan 19, 2011 4:13 am
by Arthur Digbee
Supposedly they're quite easy to wake even when sleeping in winter. A bear researcher I met a few years back said that's why it's important to have at least one overweight grad student on the team.
Can't speak for the Northern Rockies, but bear protocol in the Appalachians is to assume they're active year-round. chugach mtn boy's story about Kenai suggests you're probably best off assuming that everywhere.