Monthly Archives: July 2019

What Would You Do if You Encountered a Bear in the Woods?

What would you do if you saw a bear in the woods? It’s fun to imagine hypothetical situations and wonder how you would react in a high-stress scenario, but for anyone traveling to Alaska or anywhere else with wild bear populations, you should seriously consider how you would react if you encountered a bear in the woods. Don’t venture into the Alaska bush with no bear protection plan in mind. Educate yourself, learn about bear behavior, ways to avoid bears, and what to do if you encounter a bear.

Bertie from Effortless Outdoors recently sent me a link to his article titled, What To Do If You See A Bear (And Why) and asked me to mention it on my blog. The piece is very detailed and well-researched. My one complaint is he didn’t separate Kodiak bears (or even Alaskan brown bears) from grizzly bears. While all brown bears are members of the same species, grizzlies and coastal brown bears exist in different environments and often do not react the same way to humans. Kodiak bears have more to eat and grow larger than grizzlies, but grizzlies are often more aggressive than Kodiak bears toward humans. This one criticism aside, though, Bertie’s article is good and provides some interesting facts.

Unless your goal is to see a bear, follow Bertie’s tips for avoiding a bear encounter. He helps separate fact from fiction. For example, studies show those obnoxious little bear bells that annoy your hiking companions do not deter bears and may even attract them. A whistle is also a bad idea.

Keep in mind, bears have individual personalities and do not all react to humans in the same way. A bear’s response to a person depends, in part, upon his past experiences with people. If a bear rarely sees humans, he could be startled, curious, or terrified to spot a person on his trail. On the other hand, a bear living in an area commonly visited by tourists might not even look at you as you pass him in the woods. Black bears behave differently from brown bears, and a polar bear’s reaction to a human is so dissimilar from the response of a black or brown bear, it’s a bit misleading even to include polar bears in the same article.

My husband, Mike Munsey, and I take guests bear viewing each summer. Mike knows Kodiak bears well. He understands their body language and vocalizations and can quickly spot a bear acting aggressively. He would be the first to tell you, though, that bears in other areas of Alaska often exhibit different behaviors from the ones we encounter.

If you are planning to travel in bear country, research the bears in the area you plan to visit. Contact biologists and ask what information you can download about the bears you might encounter, and inquire into methods you can use to protect yourself. If you are camping, you will want bear-proof food containers, and if you plan to camp in an area with a high concentration of bears, you might consider purchasing a portable electric fence.

If you want to see bears but don’t know anything about them, hire a guide. You have no business trying to get close to a bear on your own if you have no bear experience.

One of my favorite parts of Bertie’s article is where he uses an illustration to demonstrate the likelihood of being killed by a bear. As the graphic clearly shows, you are much more likely to be killed by a dog, a cow, or lightning than you are to be mauled and killed by a bear.

The bottom line if you encounter a bear in the woods: respect the bear’s intelligence and strength, but don’t fear the animal. The bear is likely more terrified of an encounter with you than you are of seeing him.


Robin Barefield is the author of three Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, and The Fisherman’s Daughter. Sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska, and listen to her podcast, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier.

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Why are Gray Whales Dying?

One-hundred-seventy-one gray whales have washed up on Pacific beaches from Mexico to Alaska so far this year. Seventy-eight whales were spotted off the coast of Mexico, 85 in U.S. waters, and eight near Canada. Of the whales found along the U.S. Pacific Coast, 37 dead whales were spotted in California, five in Oregon, 29 in Washington, and 14 in Alaska. Since most whales sink to the ocean floor when they die, the 171 recovered carcasses probably represent only a fraction of the number of gray whales that have died on their northward migration this spring and summer.

In my last post, I wrote about tufted puffins dying on the Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea, and I explained how their deaths are likely linked to the warming ocean temperatures in the Bering Sea. It comes as no surprise to learn puffins aren’t the only animals affected by warming water temperatures and melting sea ice. From the smallest zooplankton to the most massive whales, all animals in the region are feeling the impact of climate change.

Gray whales have one of the longest migrations of any mammal.  In the summer they feed in the Arctic in the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas, and in the fall, they migrate to their calving grounds in the southern Gulf of California and Baja Mexico, a migration of 5000 to 7000 miles (8,050 – 11,275 km) each way.  Their average swimming speed is only 3 to 5 mph (5-8 km/hr), so this migration takes a long time.

NOAA

The known deaths of 171 whales have induced the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to declare an “unusual mortality event” and launch an investigation to determine why the whales are dying. Necropsies of the whales indicate most have starved to death. Ship strikes killed four found in San Francisco Bay, and since gray whales don’t usually enter this area, researchers assume these animals were stressed and perhaps searching for food.

Investigators aren’t sure why the whales are starving, but they think it’s possible the gray whale population has exceeded its carrying capacity under current conditions. In other words, there are too many gray whales and not enough food.

We know gray whales have been impacted by ocean warming in recent years.  During the summer of 2018, waters in the Bering Sea soared nine degrees warmer than average. These increasing seawater temperatures have reduced winter ice cover in the region, which has led to a reduction in productivity.  Primary productivity in the northern Bering Sea declined 70% from 1988 to 2004. This previously ice-dominated, shallow ecosystem favored large communities of benthic amphipods (the favorite food of gray whales), but it has now been replaced by an ecosystem dominated by smaller species of zooplankton, such as krill. Gray whales have responded by migrating further north to the Chukchi Sea, but amphipods might now be disappearing from this region as well, forcing gray whales to consume less nutritious krill, and krill might not contain the percentage of fatty acids the whales need to build adequate blubber.

Scientists expect to find more dead gray whales this summer, and one was recently washed up on a beach on Kodiak Island. NOAA continues to monitor the mortality event and posts updates on this website.


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Robin Barefield is the author of three Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, and The Fisherman’s Daughter. To download a free copy of one of her novels, watch her webinar about how she became an author and why she writes Alaska wilderness mysteries. Also, sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska.

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Sign Up for my free, monthly Mystery Newsletter about true crime in Alaska.