We drove into town yesterday to plant some carrots in the Community Garden. When we came home we drove down our driveway and were surprised to see a black bear there, looking up at us and just as surprised as we were. It then scrambled over to the side of the yard and climbed a few feet up the trunk of a cottonwood tree and stopped there, watching us, as it decided what to do.
I took a photo with my iPhone, then got out of the car, shouted and waved my hands at the bear, but it just continued to cling to the tree. I then walked to the house to get my camcorder so I could take some better photos of the bear, but of course, by the time I had my camera and was back outside, the bear had disappeared into the bush.
While we had been in town, the black bear had dragged the container of tin cans that we had saved for recycling out from the carport and onto the edge of the driveway, where he dumped it over. Even though we had washed all the cans, I guess some of them still had the scent of food on them.
The bear had also turned over our barbecue grill and left it sprawled on our back deck.
This morning, as I walked by the tree the bear had been on, I spotted a tin can in the woods. It was dented and had a hole in its side, where the bear had bitten into it. Bears have pretty strong jaws.
While a lot of people are terrified of bears, the ones we have around our house are not at all threatening. They just want to quietly find some food, and not encounter any humans. I worry at lot about the survival of wildlife in this deteriorating world, so I was happy to see that this bear, who seemed very healthy, had made it through the winter.
View my paintings at: davidmarchant2.ca