Posted on 03/29/2024 6:01:27 AM PDT by marktwain
Sorry ‘bout your headache...
I’m steadily getting over it. It’s the two broken arms that are the real problem.
“I wouldn’t go any way near a Bear unless I had a 12gage that carried slugs
big ones.”
We get black bears on our property seasonally...I scare them away with a bright flashlight and a Umerex Steel Storm (I’m on my deck the bear is one story below).
I did get rather close to two Alaskan brown bears once — they took a swipe at my dangling leg and missed me by a foot or two...11:30 PM still fairly bright outside as the sun had yet to set...
One of my nine lives gone that evening to be sure! (Working in a cannery - NO ability to carry...)
“I’m steadily getting over it. It’s the two broken arms that are the real problem.”
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/4227630/posts
Did I leave off the part that I tending a relatives still?
Sure. And Smallpox virus are simply being a virus when it attacks and kills human hosts. Anopheles mosquitoes are only being mosquitoes when they infect humans with malaria. If mosquitoes triggered the maternal instinct which fuzzy mammals, such as bears, trigger, there would be a greater cry to keep them from being swatted.
There are several cases where people are killed in these kind of attacks, where the bear leaves then comes back and feeds on the remains. Most of the time it does not happen, because people today are good at rescues.
It is more likely the bear stops because, instinctively, prey which ceases to struggle is dead or dying, and they will be able to come back and feed on them later, after the prey have "softened" a bit.
The bear attacks, and doesn't stop until the thing attacked appears to be dead or dying.
"simply being a bear—reacting to his presence as a threat to her cubs." This is a serious bit of anthropomorphizing, attempting to give the bear human motherly feelings.
Most bear species do not react this way. Brown/Grizzly bears (the same species) are unique. It is probably because they evolved with humans in Europe and Asia, and those which attacked single or paired humans passed their genes on more successfully than those which did not.
Bears seldom attack three or more humans. It is obvious why. Three or more humans, armed even with relatively primitive weapons, tend to kill bears. Those genes do not get passed on.
This worked until humans developed technology which allowed single humans to effectively kill bears much of the time.
Then even the brown/grizzly bears began to alter their behavior, as those which did not were selected out of the gene pool.
The other bear species across the world do not react this way.
How about a .22?
are dead because you brought pepper spray or were worried about the trophy.
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