Published:Friday, November 21, 2008 10:25 AM PST
Serving the South Coast of Oregon

Trouble’s a bruin in Reedsport
Friday, November 21, 2008 10:25 AM PST

The bears are back in town in Reedsport.  Hungry bears.

People in the Crestview Drive area have called in several reports of rummaging black bears in the past few days. Local Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife biologists say they aren’t surprised.

The bears are taking advantage of the last good days of the year to go on a  feeding frenzy, said Bill Kinyoun, a district wildlife biologist for ODFW. Bear complaints and sightings from all over the region, not just Reedsport, have gone up in the past week after the recent stretch of mild, sunny weather.

“They are doing everything they can to get every single ounce of fat they can before hibernation,” Kinyoun said. “They will continue to be that way until we get some really cold weather.”

They aren’t picky, either. Bears will sniff around for cat or dog food left outside, garbage, fallen fruit, bird feeders and debris left on the grill from the last summer barbecue.

Reedsport dispatcher Jerry Wilson confirmed that police are aware of the four-legged food seekers.

“We have a few bears around here,” Wilson said.

Police don’t know if Crestview Drive has attracted a solo marauder or a furry posse. In any case, a trap has been set out.

Bears probably will retreat to their winter dens after the next few weeks. Until then, people are urged to bear-proof their houses and yards to dissuade any uninvited dinner guests.

“In general, the best thing for people to do is to step back and think like a bear —  look at their property and put themselves in the paws of a bear and ask: ‘What would I like if I were a bear?’” Kinyoun said.

Bears are just searching for a meal, but there is a down side in allowing them to get too accustomed to finding food where people live. Humans and bears in close proximity eventually leads to trouble — sometimes for the people but much more often for the bears. If nuisance or aggressive bears are caught, they will be killed.

“We don’t turn those bears loose,” Kinyoun said. “Once they have begun to associate humans with an easy food source, there is no breaking them of that.”


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