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Home / Neighborhood / San Gabriel Valley / Monrovia Weekly / It’s Hot , It’s Summer – The Bears are Back in the Foothills

It’s Hot , It’s Summer – The Bears are Back in the Foothills

by Staff
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Los Angeles County Sheriff’s dept. says it is always wise to give a bear as much room as you possibly can. “If you see a bear in a residential community, leave the area and call 9-1-1.
Bears don’t want to play, they just want humans to go away,” the LASD advises.
Gatherings of people watching the bears, smelling like humans and making noises scare the bears. Once scared, they just want to go home to the forest. You can help them by going home too. Bears are wild animals and unpredictable.
Mama bears are especially protective of their cubs.

Encounters with Black Bears have been numerous over the past fifteen years. Foothill neighborhoods are especially apt to have bear visitors during summer and fall months during years when there iit is hot and not a lot of rainfall. Eating from fruit trees and drinking from and swimming in pools, spas and ponds are activities which will most likely increase if the bear populations continue to increase. The Black Bears were introduced into the San Gabriel Mountains in 1933. They are all descendants of 11 bears deported from Yosemite National Park for being troublemakers.

 

STASH YOUR FOOD AND TRASH:

Bears and other animals are attracted to anything edible or smelly.
Store garbage in bear-proof containers, or store garbage in your garage until pick-up.
Keep food indoors or in airtight and odor-free containers.
Put away picnic leftovers; clean BBQ grills.
Keep pet food inside, and bird feeders away.
Pick up fallen tree fruit as soon as possible, or protect fruit trees with electric fencing.
Remove cosmetic fragrances and other attractants, including bird feeders and compost piles.
Install or request bear-proof trash containers.
BEAR COUNTRY PRECAUTIONS:
Keep a close watch on children, and teach them what to do if they encounter a bear.
While hiking, make noise to avoid a surprise encounter with a bear.
Never keep food in your tent.
Store food and toiletries in bear-proof containers or in an airtight container in the trunk of your vehicle.
Keep a clean camp by cleaning up and storing food and garbage immediately after meals.
Use bear-proof garbage cans whenever possible or store your garbage in a secure location with your food.
Never approach a bear or pick up a bear cub.
If you encounter a bear, do not run; instead, face the animal, make noise and try to appear as large as possible.
If attacked, fight back.
If a bear attacks a person, immediately call 911.
When wild animals are allowed to feed on human food and garbage, they lose their natural ways – often resulting in death for the animal.
Please respect and protect wild animals.
Keep them wild.
For more information:
Be Bear Aware – Project WILD, California

California Department of Fish and Game
Twitter @CaliforniaDFG
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/projectwild/bear.html#middle_column
Keep Me Wild – More Great Bear Facts from California Dept. of Fish & Game:
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/keepmewild/bear.html/

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