Aussie leslie wrote:Did a bear demolish that van must have been an angry one
I doubt anger played a part as much as hunger. Bears are omnivores and very opportunistic. I believe the point being made with this image is that even manufactured campers with metal skin are no match for the swipe of the paw of either species commonly found in North America. I grew up in northern Minnesota and have seen multiple cabins with windows and doors torn completely out of their openings and plenty of claw marks and gouges all around.
tony.latham wrote:We boondock throughout central and western Montana. I'd have to think long and hard to come up with a place we've teardropped that isn't bear country --eighteen years of teardropping without a single bear issue. (Damn!)
This is my experience around the western Great Lakes region as well. About 75% of the US and Canada are known territory of either Ursus arctos horribilis (Grizzly or brown bear) or Ursus americanus (black bear) and they are generally both just as uninterested in sharing campsites with us humans as we are of them.
tony.latham wrote:Boondocking keeps us out of campgrounds. Problem bears are attracted to campgrounds.
Unfortunately, problem campers are also attracted to campgrounds which tends to attract the bears.
tony.latham wrote:Here's my camp-mate checking out a grizzly-marked tree while Cora sniffs the breeze. Note that she's standing on a log...And yes, that's bear spray in her left hand.
Never a bad idea to be prepared and carry, uhhm... protection.
