QOTD: Bears. Seems from some fb reports that there is a mama with 3 cubs that has been hanging out along my usual route. They have moved into the area and this is the 3rd or 4th sighting within a mile of my house, along my route, I've seen posted in the last week. What considerations (if any) do you take into account regarding wildlife during your runs, especially in the spring when there are babies/protective mamas?
I get the whole "they're more scared of you than you are of them" thing, but babies change the dynamic for sure this time of year. (There was a girl out on a run who was attacked by a mama bear a year or 2 ago about an hour south of where i live.)
OK, so I have had two encounters with black bears that have required yelling/action.
The first time was hiking in Grand Teton National Park in 2017. My husband and I were heading back to the car, about 1/4 mile from the trailhead, when a woman and her teenage son came walking quickly our way and said there was a bear walking up the path. (It had been in the parking lot looking for garbage, despite the bear-proof garbage cans.) It wasn't close enough to be a threat yet, but kept walking up the path. We started yelling and clapping and waving our arms. It kept sauntering on toward us (I figure the trail was the path of least resistance.) A family of three came up behind us and necessarily joined us in our yelling and waving. I think we got two more people in our group, and finally the bear turned off the path and walked parallel to the path, maybe 20 feet off. Once it got by us and heading to wherever it was going, we all proceeded on our way to the trailhead - and we did report the bear to the park rangers.
My big take-away from that is that the advice to yell, make noise, and wave your arms to look big does let the bear know you're there, but he's not necessarily going to be scared at all of you - he will just avoid a confrontation. (By the way, my husband did have bear spray in case of a charge, but it didn't get to that.)
The second bear encounter that I've head was when I was running alone on the road after sunrise in the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia, within a resort-type residential area. This part of the resort had single-family houses well spaced out and lots of woods. I had just stopped at my turn-around point and heard something cracking branches coming out of the wood. I was expecting deer. No, a black bear maybe 50 feet away. (Oh crap!) He looked my way, and I immediately waved my arms big - instantly he turned away from me and crossed the road back into woods. As he crossed, I could see he must have had an injured back leg/paw because he wasn't walking on it. The woods were pretty sparse in that area and a decent number of folks were out walking their dogs, etc., so I warned people I ran into - apparently the bear was known to be around.
At any rate, I would recommend that you BE AWARE of your surroundings - maybe don't use those headphones, for example. If you see the bear, stop, wave your arms and yell. Don't expect her to run off like a scared deer, but she'll avoid an encounter if she can. Back away at a walk - don't run.
Making noise as you go can be useful, but the park rangers we've talked to have said that things like "bear bells" aren't really very effective - it's human voices that are what the bears will avoid. While hiking in bear country, we have encountered humans playing singing (or the humans themselves singing) to make themselves known.