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View Full Version : Are the bears waking up yet?



ImkerVS
03-12-2007, 22:23
I took a hike over Pond Mountain on Saturday March 10th (between Laurel Falls and Watauga Lake) and soon as I got some elevation there was what looked like bear scat on the trail, and fresh.

Are they up and around?

rafe
03-12-2007, 23:29
I don't know when they're supposed to wake up, but I've heard that they're mighty hungry when they do. :D

Pedaling Fool
03-12-2007, 23:33
They will come out of their deep sleep during the winter, if the days are warm. And yes, they are hungry. But, At least here in the south, I'm sure they are all starting to wake up.

freefall
03-13-2007, 00:02
Take a look for yourself...

http://www.bear.org/Black/Bear_Den_Cam_Page_1.html

Lone Wolf
03-13-2007, 09:05
I took a hike over Pond Mountain on Saturday March 10th (between Laurel Falls and Watauga Lake) and soon as I got some elevation there was what looked like bear scat on the trail, and fresh.

Are they up and around?

black bears don't hibernate. they're always "up".

Bloodroot
03-13-2007, 09:33
black bears don't hibernate. they're always "up".

He's right. They go through torpor, not hibernation.

TJ aka Teej
03-13-2007, 17:51
Somebody hit a black bear near Fryeburg, Maine a few weeks ago.
By this time next month they'll be up and about all over NH and ME.

mweinstone
03-13-2007, 18:20
"there will be no bears while you are sleeping" jeff /hike inn.

daves mom
03-13-2007, 18:54
my son is coming down from ohio approx apr 1 and he said the bears are still a little groggy but his aunt reminded him they are hungry also

Possum Bill
03-13-2007, 23:40
My wife and I hiked from Watagua Lake across Pond Mountain on Saturday too, and camped near Laurel Falls on Saturday night, then hiked back across on Sunday. We saw the same two piles of scat you saw coming down into Laurel Fork Gorge (it was very fresh on Saturday) and we were a little surprised to see it. Not sure if you noticed but it looked like the bear had also made his own "trail" off into the forest at the end of that switchback (like he'd been using that section of the AT for a while).

We also had to move a snake out of the way when we were coming down the north side of Pond Mt. on Sunday... which surprised us a little too. Maybe this mild winter is really waking things up early.

Just curious, were you the guy we passed that was camping up on Pond Flats on Saturday?

Take care,
Bill

ImkerVS
03-14-2007, 09:10
No, I didn't camp. Didn't see you.

With the incline of Pond Mountain, the trail is a bear highway there, don't you think?

I also caught a whiff of the bear, I think, as the breeze changed directions about 3 minutes uphill from the scat. Sort of an heavy dirty odor. Instinct said quietly to forebrain: "Smelly. Bear." Only for a second.

I carry a Wal-Mart $5 air horn, but since trying it out it is loud, yes. but sounds like the dying bleat of something edible.

saimyoji
03-14-2007, 10:56
sounds like the dying bleat of something edible.

LOL...... :D

Footslogger
03-14-2007, 11:05
Any "bear bells" in the scat ?? That's how to tell if they're dangerous !!

'Slogger

Cosmo
03-17-2007, 21:04
Just went to a 90min presentation on Black Bears by the Mass Dept of Fish and Wildlife last week. In Mass, males and females w/o newborns are getting up and about (this recent snow will make them less active because it's difficult range about and finding food is difficult).

Females w/ newborns will probably stay in their dens until there is more to eat, and the cubs develop further. Internal gestation begins in Dec/January, 'tho mating took place in late summer and early fall. A blatocyst is the result of mating and may or may not develop depending on the female's diet--and the resulting energy reources.

Cubs are born in late January/Early Feb, and are small, blind and hairless, doing the majority of their growing in the den while mom snoozes.

Black bears do not exactly hibernate, I think torpor was used by a previous poster that describes it rather well. Some bears den up in holes or other well protected areas, othe have been found just sleeping under fallen trees.

A common early spring diet is skunk cabbage and other similar greens found in wetlands, so that is a likely place for early season bears. As the things green up at higher elevations the bears will expand their ranges and diets. Female ranges typically overlap, male ranges do not, and males travel long distances after they are kicked loose by momma during thier 2nd summer (in the south, bears can give birth every season, here in southern New England, typically every other year--depending on food resources).The occasional dead deer or other winter kill is an early season bonus source of protein.

Hopefully people are bringing in their birdfeeders and pet dishes and keeping their garbage locked up as the days get warmer. Average bear density in western Mass is approximately 1.1 bears per square mile! NJ is much higher.

Cosmo