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Grizzly cubs sought after mother stabbed
Fish and wildlife officers are searching for three orphan grizzly bear cubs after a man fought and killed their mother near Grande Prairie Wednesday.
By The Edmonton JournalAugust 18, 2007Be the first to post a comment
Fish and wildlife officers are searching for three orphan grizzly bear cubs after a man fought and killed their mother near Grande Prairie Wednesday.

The man came between the mother and her cubs while looking for elk in preparation for the bow-hunting season. When the female grizzly attacked, he stabbed her three times with a hunting knife, then fled across a field, screaming for help, before a neighbour came to his rescue.

The man is recovering in a Grande Prairie hospital. He had bites, scratches and a broken limb.

The bear fled after the man stabbed it. Her body was found roughly 30 metres from where the attack took place.

"Wish him well for me," said Greg Flaaten, a 42-year-old Banff resident mauled by a black bear one year ago.

Flaaten was attacked while biking about seven kilometres outside the town of Banff. The bear dragged him off the bike and about 70 metres into the bush, where it ate much of Flaaten's shoulder, back and part of his arm.

He was with the bear an hour and 40 minutes before park wardens shot it and rescued him. He still faces monthly reconstructive surgery to graft muscle tissue from his leg to his arm. But if doctors don't see progress soon, he'll lose the arm.

"I had a knife, too, but I wasn't able to get to it. Sometimes you're just not able to defend yourself against an animal that powerful and well-equipped for taking prey down. ... I guess I looked like an easy target that day."

Flaaten won't talk about the attack itself. "I know everyone is interested, but recounting the details doesn't help me get past it."

The man involved in Wednesday night's attack also requested privacy. He asked hospital officials not to release any information to the media.

A volunteer firefighter who responded Wednesday night described him as being in his 30s, six-feet tall and of average build. He is not from the community of Grovedale, where the attack took place, but had been asking several farmers in the area if he could hunt on their land, neighbours said.

Johann Wall was the first to hear the man's cries.

"I was working outside on my truck when I heard him scream and yell for help," Wall said. He jumped in his van and drove down the road and up a hill. "I saw him come running across the field," Wall said. "When he laid down that's when he started to feel the pain."

Fish and wildlife officers found the bear's carcass Thursday morning and set traps for the cubs.

"What we're hoping is we can relocate them out of the area and release them back into the wild," said Alberta Sustainable Resource Development spokesman Darcy Whiteside.

The bear's carcass has been sent to Edmonton for a full autopsy. Officials have confirmed it was a grizzly.

The attack happened on private land near an oat field and a dense, swampy area, Whiteside said. The cubs were still missing Friday evening.

Maurice Nadeau, president of Alberta Fish & Game Association, said it's common practice for hunters to go out before the season to scout where animals are most likely to be.

It's easy to surprise a bear because the scout has to be quiet. "It's a risk we take," he said.

"Especially this time of year, when you go out, make noise," Whiteside added, pointing to the ministry's website for bear-smart tips.

Jasper park warden Steve Malcolm said he's never heard of anyone fighting off and killing a grizzly. An adult grizzly weighs between 350 pounds and 650 pounds and will be searching for food at this time of year, trying to bulk up for the winter, he said. It's much larger than a black bear and generally lives farther from human homes.

"If you get a grizzly bear that is protecting her cubs, she's going to do everything she can. That's a pretty typical situation."
 
‘It was so unreal:’ Grande Cache man feels lucky to be alive after encounter with grizzly
CHRISTOPHER MILLS – Herald-Tribune staff
Posted 3 days ago


James Wanyandie, who suffered a broken arm and deep scratches to his leg as the result of a bear attack near Grande Cache last weekend, and his wife, Carol, speak with reporters in a waiting room at the QEII Hospital yesterday.

Christopher Mills


A northern Alberta man is thankful to be alive after being attacked by a grizzly bear on Saturday.

“I didn’t know what to think. I just think of God in a time like that, for sure,” James Wanyandie said from his bed at the QEII Hospital in Grande Prairie yesterday.

“Nobody usually survives grizzly attacks anymore. There are survivors, but they have really bad injuries. I thought ‘were we going to make it back to the vehicle to get some help?’ It was hard.”

The 39-year-old Cree man from north of Grande Cache was out with his 77-year-old father, Tom, on Saturday in the bush looking for moose antlers.

He uses them for carvings, furniture and decorations around his home.

While they were out walking, Wanyandie said he heard a noise above him and looked up to see a grizzly cub climbing in a tree.

Shortly after, he heard more noise and found himself looking at the mother as she charged at him.

“I saw a bear, a small cub climbing a tree and then I said to my dad ‘bear,’ and started loading the gun up right away,” he said.

“I looked to the side and I saw the (mother) bear, right under where the small bear was on the tree; I saw the bear coming full speed at me.”

Wanyandie quickly aimed his weapon and fired, but the bullet appeared to miss and the noise of the shot didn’t faze the bear at all. It pounced on the man, clamping its huge jaws on his arm, snapping it right through.

“For a moment I thought she was going to stop; that’s what they usually do,” he said. “She swung me around like nothing.”

Seeing his son being tossed around, the elderly Wanyandie ran at the bear, yelling and cursing, brandishing a walking stick.

He managed to shove the stick in the bear’s mouth, doing enough damage to get the sow off his son.

Wanyandie said the bear then turned on his father. Lying on the ground, his arm snapped in two, he attempted to reload his gun with one arm but it wouldn’t work.

“I don’t know what I did. I just grabbed the gun and poked at the bear because it’s on my dad now,” he said.

“Then it got the attention back on me. That’s when it grabbed my leg and came after me again. I was almost kind of knocked out. It was so unreal.”

Tom Wanyandie continued to beat the bear on the head and nose with his walking stick and it eventually ran off.

After the bear left, Wanyandie and his father made the 600-yard (546 metres) trek to their vehicle.

“We kept on looking back, thinking it was going to come after us,” he said.

“We kept straight towards the vehicle. Step by step, my leg kept getting stiffer and stiffer. The blood was not dripping, but I could see either a bite or a big scratch, real deep.”

Wanyandie climbed into the driver’s seat and drove himself and his father back towards the highway.

“My hand was hanging, crunching every time I bounced it,” he said. “I tried not to think about it. There was a lot of pain, but at the same time I was trying to be tough.”

Driving with one arm, he had to drive another 500 or so metres towards Highway 40 before cell reception kicked in. He then called his wife and told her what had happened, asking her to call 911 to meet him somewhere on the highway.

“I didn’t know what to think,” Carol Wanyandie said. “The first thing that popped into my mind, when you hear about a grizzly attack or a bear attack, just the worst picture pops into your head. I didn’t know what to expect.”

The couple has six children – ranging in age from 18 months to 11 years old – who were all crying when their mother left for the hospital.

“Once I came back and explained Dad was going to be okay, they were fine,” Carol said.

The children usually accompany their father into the bush, but this was a rare time when he went without them, Carol said.

“Once he’s healed, but he won’t be taking my boys out anymore,” she said, when asked if she would be okay with her husband going back out into the bush.

The two men met up with an emergency response team and were taken to Grande Cache hospital and James was later transferred to the QEII Hospital in Grande Prairie.

Tom, who James said had a broken hand after being bitten by the bear, was treated for minor injuries and released. James suffered a broken arm and deep wounds to his leg, though he is not sure if they are teeth or scratch marks.

He is being released today after three days in hospital, but doctors say it will be about eight weeks before his bones heal and probably close to October before he can begin physiotherapy.

Both Carol and James said something needs to be done about the grizzly population in northern Alberta.

“For us to get attacked, me and my dad, it shouldn’t have been; we’re experienced, but I guess anybody can get attacked,” he said. “There are too many grizzlies out there. I think something has to be done about it. It can’t continue like that. There are too many attacks every year; some have been killed, some make it but get bad injuries.”

“Within the last two or three years we’ve noticed a big increase, not just in grizzlies but even in cougars,” Carol said. “This past winter, trappers were catching them in their wolf snares.”

The best advice James can give to people out in the bush is to be extremely cautious and prepared. He said this attack would definitely make him more cautious.

“I’m always cautious, but I might have an extra weapon, for sure,” he said.
 
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