Grizzly terror; Alone, no gun, no phone, hungry bear at the door

John Y Cannuck

RichPoorMan<br>Super Moderator
Moderating Team
Rating - 100%
15   0   0
From the CFD
(this should be enough to start a bear defense thread):D
Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 11:51:01 -0600 (CST)
From: owner-cdn-firearms@sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca (Majordomo User)
Subject: Grizzly terror; Alone, no gun, no phone, hungry bear at the door

PUBLICATION: Yellowknifer
DATE: 2005.12.23
BYLINE: Northern News Services
ILLUSTRATION: Mike W. Bryant/NNSL photo Kate Tompkins was in a joking
moodWednesday as she eyed a fossilized cave bear jaw at John A.'s Paleo
Emporium. On Sunday she had a real life bear encounter when a grizzly
showed up at her doorstep.
WORD COUNT: 492

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------

Grizzly terror; Alone, no gun, no phone, hungry bear at the door

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wildlife encounters come every day at Kate Tompkins' Tibbitt Lake home,
but she didn't expect to come eye-to-eye with a grizzly bear on her
doorstep.

It was 6 a.m. Sunday when she was roused from her sleep by her faithful
dog Buddy.

Tompkins let him out to pee and he began barking wildly. She went
outside to check and saw nothing.

The dog continued to bark, so bleary-eyed and naked she opened the door
once again.

"I opened the door and there was this enormous, and I mean huge bear on
the porch about three feet away," said Tompkins.

"He was on his way through the door, which I had just very conveniently
opened for him, of course."

She screamed, which stopped the bear momentarily, and then slammed the
door shut so violently that she twisted her knee - which later required
physiotherapy and a cane.

Shaking with fear, she realized the bear was between her and her gun
stored in the shed. Her bear spray and bangers were in her boat - also
outside.

"I shook for a little while and then went back and banged some pots and
pans at him," she said.

"He just sat there looking at me as if to say, 'Well, bring on the
entertainment.'"

Finally the bear took off over an embankment, and she was able to get
Buddy inside.

Tompkins had means to communicate with the outside world but it was a
satellite phone which didn't work inside her house.

For six hours, Tompkins remained trapped inside her cabin, afraid to
venture outside with the dog still barking at the unseen menace.

Around noon, with full daylight outside, she felt brave enough to run to
the shed to get the gun, but her phone still wouldn't work.

"So I had to make a run for the truck, with gun in hand and drive a
couple miles up the road before I could get a satellite lock to call,"
said Tompkins.

Less than an hour later wildlife officers appeared at her door, and
began looking for the bear.

When she later looked at the animal's tracks, she said they appeared to
be 12 inches across.

The bear had wandered around her cabin, over to a guest house, and into
her dormant garden. He left claw marks at her door and on a window.

The brute also found his way into the back of her pick-up truck where
Tompkins had stacked some garbage and a brand new propane toilet.

The grizzly tore off the cardboard packing and into the aluminum toilet
itself, which cut his mouth. She later noticed that the bear left a
smear of blood on her door jamb.

"I've seen lots of animals; the caribou go right through my yard some
years," said Tompkins.

"I've seen lots of wolves, I've seen lots of black bears, I've seen lots
of wildlife, but this is the first time I've ever seen a grizzly bear."

The bear eventually wandered towards Yellowknife, some 70 km away.
Wildlife officers found it following a fence at the North Slave
Correctional Centre on Tuesday, where it was shot.

Senior wildlife officer Raymond Bourget said the male grizzly was in
very poor condition. It should've been denning, but was unable to
because it was old and starving.

It was only the second time on record that a grizzly made its way into
city limits. Another old male grizzly was found and shot by wildlife
officers in November 2004 in almost the same location where this year's
bear turned up.

Bourget said this grizzly could have been hanging around Ingraham Trail
area all year long, even though it's far from its normal range out in
the Barrenlands.

"There's potential that the bears have started to come down and to adapt
to living down here and denning up and stuff," said Bourget.

"But at this point we would say it's certainly something that is
unusual."

Now that she has had a few days to calm down, Tompkins said she feels
privileged to have had the encounter.

"People shouldn't be afraid," said Tompkins.

"One of the main reasons I live here is because we have access to the
wilderness. One of the charms of living in the wilderness is you
encounter large animals."
 
Foxer said:
Propane toilet?

yeah it burns the pooh and evaporates the urine, leaves a little dried up poo sticle for you to shovel out later, but it is pretty spanky and very hygenic because the poo is baked into a sterile little turd.
 
It's amazing how big these things look when you see them unexpectedly at close range. If that bear decided he wanted in, she would of been up for the Darwin Award. If you live in bear county you can't forget how these guys make a living, or that they can appear at any time.

I was interested in the claw marks on the window - our cabin window has similar marks - the theory around here is that if a bear sees it's reflection in a window he'll smack it thinking it's another bear, I have no theory for these light caresses which do no damage. In any case it was enough for the wife to insist on putting up the shutter at night, which no amount of protest could quell.
 
Shooting the bear seems a bit drastic to me though. Granted, I suppose it was not too scared of humans since it was walking around her yard and all, but still... shoot it because he was a little curious?

The fact that he was old and not denning does not seem to justify shooting it in my mind. He probably would not have survived the winter anyway.

I suppose you could say that he would have eventually came back to town and maybe cause a scene... but we'll never know I guess. Im all for shooting problem bears, but this one didnt seem that problematic based on what I read.
 
If they're actively trying to get into an occupied home - that's a little too 'familiar' with humans for a griz.

Maybe if it were a black - but any griz that's willing to try that hard to get into an occupied home is likely a problem waiting to happen.
 
Rifle in the house/cabin/tent. Geez what ever happened to common sense?

Oh yeah, I'm back in Kanada!

Sat phones like a NERA Inmarsat with external detachable antennas should have their antennas permanently mounted in a suitable functioning location so that the phone can be used at a moments notice.

Sat phones like the Globalstars with small attached rubber ducky antenna's are generally poor performers (especially at high latitudes) and should be used as doorstops and paperweights.

If it's one
 
Steyr101 said:
Shooting the bear seems a bit drastic to me though. Granted, I suppose it was not too scared of humans since it was walking around her yard and all, but still... shoot it because he was a little curious?

The fact that he was old and not denning does not seem to justify shooting it in my mind. He probably would not have survived the winter anyway.

I suppose you could say that he would have eventually came back to town and maybe cause a scene... but we'll never know I guess. Im all for shooting problem bears, but this one didnt seem that problematic based on what I read.

I'm

X2
 
Steyr101 said:
Shooting the bear seems a bit drastic to me though. Granted, I suppose it was not too scared of humans since it was walking around her yard and all, but still... shoot it because he was a little curious?

The fact that he was old and not denning does not seem to justify shooting it in my mind. He probably would not have survived the winter anyway.

I suppose you could say that he would have eventually came back to town and maybe cause a scene... but we'll never know I guess. Im all for shooting problem bears, but this one didnt seem that problematic based on what I read.

I'm new

X2
 
Steyr101 said:
Shooting the bear seems a bit drastic to me though. Granted, I suppose it was not too scared of humans since it was walking around her yard and all, but still... shoot it because he was a little curious?

The fact that he was old and not denning does not seem to justify shooting it in my mind. He probably would not have survived the winter anyway.

I suppose you could say that he would have eventually came back to town and maybe cause a scene... but we'll never know I guess. Im all for shooting problem bears, but this one didnt seem that problematic based on what I read.

X2

Seemed like he was just passing through didn't it?
 
+1
The CO's stated the bear was in very poor shape, starving, etc. That makes for a dangerous bear.
 
boxhitch said:
I think the CO's could have just let the bear inside the fence at the corrections site. THAT would make for good footage !!

+2 LMAO!
At least he would have got a hot meal (a few inmates), and maybe learned a new trade. :D
 
Back
Top Bottom