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Grizzly Bear Shot and Killed By Hikers In Denali National Park and Preserve

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A grizzly bear that emerged from a thicket and charged two backpackers in the backcountry of Denali National Park and Preserve was shot and killed by one of the two who was carrying a .45-caliber semi-automatic pistol, according to park officials.

The killing Friday is believed to be the first instance of a hiker killing a grizzly in the park's wilderness. The killing occurred in the original Mount McKinley National Park portion of the Denali, which was expanded by two-thirds in 1980.

Until February, when Congress changed the rules, it was illegal to carry a loaded firearm in that portion of Denali. While the rule change now allows hikers to carry firearms in all areas of Denali, it still is illegal to discharge them, park officials said.

Park officials did not speculate whether the killing was justified. This is believed to be the first instance of a visitor to a national park killing an animal with a firearm since the gun regulations were changed.

According to a release from the park, the two backpackers, a man and woman, were hiking in dense brush along the edge of Tattler Creek, which is at the west end of Igloo Canyon roughly 35 miles from the park headquarters.

"The man, who was in the lead, drew a .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol when they heard a noise coming from the brush. When the bear emerged from the thicket and ran toward the other hiker, he fired approximately nine rounds in its general direction. The bear stopped, turned, and walked back into the brush, where it quickly disappeared from view," said the release.

The two then headed roughly 1.5 miles back to a road, where they encountered a park employee, who called in the incident and took the two backpackers to the Toklat Road Camp. A ranger there did a short preliminary interview with them at approximately 10:00 p.m. Because of the concern that a wounded bear was in the area, four backcountry units were immediately closed, and bus drivers were instructed to not drop off day hikers in the Igloo Canyon on Saturday.

"Early Saturday morning rangers and wildlife technicians flew to Toklat via helicopter to conduct a secondary interview with the two backpackers. Afterwards they flew over Tattler Creek and all of side tributaries, very low at times, to determine if there was an active, wounded bear," the park release said. "No bears were seen during the overflight, and late in the afternoon three rangers hiked into the site. The bear was found dead in a willow thicket approximately 100 feet from the pistol casings at approximately 6:00 p.m.

"The bear’s body was transported via helicopter to a landing site on the park road and brought back to headquarters on Sunday, where park wildlife biologists are assisting with the investigation of the bear carcass. The backcountry units have been reopened."

The case is still under investigation, and the names of the backpackers are not being released at this time. Park wildlife biologists and rangers are trying to determine if there was a justification for shooting the animal.

The estimated grizzly bear population in the park north of the Alaska Range north is 300-350 animals.

Comments

Then make a regulation at the entrance of the park that all guns should be kept by the park keepers and each visitor was given a bear spray and a training of how to use it. Please, stop giving lecture without actual effective action.


Let me help you in action: make reservations for bears without any human tresspassing where nobody can enter. Or just like a zoo, where the animals can live in good care and have siblings while human visitors are allowed. In Asia (China, Thailand, and Vietnam) there are public and private zoos for tigers and bears. We - the Americans - can do better job.


Some parks do have areas that are off-limits year-round to humans to protect bears. Yellowstone is one.


Hmmm. So you don't need to carry a firearm in bear country because waving your arms has worked so far. Okay, hitting the brakes on my car has worked so far, so I guess I can forget about wearing my seatbelts. Right. Got it. (Lots of folks seem to be escaping from Mister Roger's Neighborhood lately...)


Submitted by Kurt Repanshek on August 17, 2010 - 5:03pm.

Some parks do have areas that are off-limits year-round to humans to protect bears. Yellowstone is one.

Denali is two. Sable Pass closure. Only a couple clicks from the site of this incident.


In the Wyoming case, I would only say, was the guy poaching? ya know, hunting illegally.
Sounds to me like he was not, hunting and merely trying to protect himself.

Why are we being penalized for trying to survive ? We are suppposed to just lay down and play dead and die, for the poor hungry bear.
No way. Ill pay the fine. If its me or the bear, I dont give a damn about the DNR and its silly rules. I dont care, if the bear, "feels threatened". That bear is a top predator that can literally chomp my arm right off and kill and eat me.
The bear, if I can aim well enough, is gonna die. Fine or no fine.
Here are the fines for killing a bear without a permit.
http://www.wvdnr.gov/Regulations/hunting_hrBeargr.shtm

Humans first. Carnivorous predators, last.


I've really enjoyed reading these comments because as an avid hiker/backpacker it's caused me to question how I would have reacted in that situation. Honestly, knowing myself as well as I do, I suspect I would have shot the charging grizzly in a panic out of blind fear whether it was warranted or not. However, I also believe the commentators are correct who pointed out that when we venture into the wilderness we are accepting a certain level of risk. I am glad those hikers were not mauled, but personally I have decided to stay out of grizzly country, unless I am willing to rely on the bear spray, so that those animals can exist as they have for millennia without being slaughtered by a terrified hiker armed to the teeth with the various firearms I've read described in these comments. Those bears are now confined to an area that is a fraction of the territory they once roamed. The whole concept of "wilderness" is to preserve a place where the plants and animals that are there can live without being molested by humans running around shooting at them with guns.


As a Montana woman proved, you don't need to carry a firearm to protect yourself from bears. Just be prepared to make ratatouille.


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