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Grizzly shot inside home

Started by Drache, August 09, 2015, 03:04:47 PM

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Drache



In what Conservation Officer Jared Connatty says should be a wake up call to everyone, a grizzly bear was shot in a Summer Sub home (just on the edges of Kimberley, above Meadowbrook Motors) early Sunday morning.

Mark and Niki Traverse were awoken at 4:30 a.m. on Sunday to noises in their kitchen and found a grizzly boar eating dog food.

"We have an air conditioner in the bedroom and it drowns out any sound," said Niki Traverse. "But our dog was going nuts. He's just a little dog, about 20 pounds, but he was outside the bedroom door barking the house down.

"I got up to check. Mark stayed in bed. He just said, don't let the dog out, because there are coyotes.

"I came around the corner to the entry way where we have the cat and dog food. I see this huge black mass. I booked it back to the bedroom screaming, 'there's a bear in the house!' Mark's like, 'really?'. 'Yeah, really.'

"We have a gun cabinet in the bedroom, so Mark unlocked the gun.

"He came out and turned on the kitchen light. As soon as he turned on the lights the bear came out into the kitchen, straight toward my husband.

"Thank God I didn't turn on the light when I checked, that would have been bad.

"The bear was ten feet away and Mark took a shot. He came another three to four feet and Mark took another shot. It was down but still moving. We didn't want it moving, so Mark took another shot."

Niki sums the experience up this way.

"It was pretty damn scary. I was freaking out but my husband is a hunter. We're the only house on the block with a gun (a Weatherby 300). I guess the bear picked the wrong house."

Connatty says the bear pulled apart the window and got through about a three foot by two foot space. The bear also broke the screen door, but its access to the house was through the window.

"The family woke up, heard a noise and found the bear feeding on dog food. Fortunately they had a firearm in the bedroom and shot the bear right in the kitchen.

"It's a pretty remarkable story because that bear was obviously in the house for some time. They were pretty lucky. An encounter with a bear in an enclosed area is a super high safety concern. When a bear breaks into a home, the chance of contact is extremely high."

The Traverse family were managing their attractants, Connatty said.

"The dog food was in a sealed container, everything, including garbage, was inside the house," he said. "These people were doing everything right. They had the gun stored properly, everything was done properly."

For a bear to get to the point of breaking into a house, it's been rewarded for this behaviour before, the CO says.

"These people were managing their attractants, but obviously at some point someone wasn't, and this bear learned from it."

"We did one thing wrong," Niki said. "I left a window open. I've lived in this house since 1991 and we always leave a window open when it's hot. Not anymore. I'll never do that again."

Connatty says the bear was not in great shape.

"He was definitely on a downward slide. It could be he'd been pushed out of his territory by another big grizzly boar, but it could also be the bear was hungry because it's a very poor berry year. You could speculate until you're blue in the face."

"It wasn't in great shape," Niki said. "The CO said by the size of its teeth, he figured it was at least ten years old.  But it was skinny and I thought a ten-year old grizzly would be bigger than that.

This is a good reminder to everyone, that especially with berries poor this year because of the drought, attractants have to be managed carefully from now right through to November.

"That means garbage, fruit trees, dog food," Connatty said. "In town the fruit trees seem to be doing well, but in the upper drainages the berries are not so good."

If you have a human wildlife encounter you are asked to call the RAPP line at 1-877-952-7277. That will get you in touch with a conservation officer. However, in an emergency situation, it's best to go through 911.

http://www.dailybulletin.ca/breaking_news/321179181.html
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myk

I don't care how old that thing was-look at those claws!

I wonder what the gun grabbers would say about a situation like this?  Should the people have tried to talk things over with the animal instead of resorting to violence? 

Mopar Nut

"Dear God, my prayer for 2024 is a fat bank account and a thin body. Please don't mix these up like you did the last ten years."

ws23rt

Quote from: myk on August 09, 2015, 05:35:53 PM
I don't care how old that thing was-look at those claws!

I wonder what the gun grabbers would say about a situation like this?  Should the people have tried to talk things over with the animal instead of resorting to violence?  


:2thumbs: Protecting one's self from a life or death situation is a no brainer. Using a gun against a hungry bear or a psycho human (random shooter for example) are the same thing.  :shruggy:  
Talking things over with a human threatening your life or others is the same.

Some could argue that the bear was just hungry and perhaps could have been subdued with food from a bear whisperer. Or the psycho can be engaged with a conversation about how his father treated him as a child. :slap:

Sorry-- but a moment of high personal risk has to be met with life saving force. The lawyers and the media will do what they do after a situation but the bottom line is no matter the outcome from a social judgment, it is clear and logical (not to mention an implanted instinct to survive) to not restrict ones ability to defend one's self and others. :Twocents:

ws23rt

This has moved me to ramble a bit. :nana:
I see an up side to all the attention things like this bring to discussion.
Whenever their is an attempt to restrict our ability to protect our selves their seems to be a surge to buy/acquire more personal protection. :lol:

The truth is that very few out there stick to the letter of the law when shit happens.  Self defense is something that happens in the moment. The clear and real reason a law may be broken is that way too many laws are ill written and/or written for political reasons.

Further on the truth is that when a situation happens it is urgent. Understanding the laws that apply to that situation are not part of the picture.

I recall years ago while training for CPR, the topic of liability came up. At the time the deal was that it was --unlikely-- that one would be sued for performing a lifesaving procedure. My thought at the time was/and is--what a sick set of rules we live with.

We have been hiring/voting for lawmakers for way too long. We need to hire/employ law repealers

Mike DC

 
We wouldn't have any big gun control controversy if we could just have two different sets of laws for urban vs rural areas.

69rtse4spd

Stick any lawery or gun control nut it that situation, & I bet their eyes would be opened up real quick. 

el dub

entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem

DeltaV

Nerves of steel! He got off three quick shots with a bolt action rifle! I am impressed. Good job  :2thumbs:
Don't fight a battle if you don't gain anything by winning. - Erwin Rommel