We always give them a wide berth. Maybe 17 years ago I was camping at a state park in NJ, High Point State Park. A Park Ranger spent all night patrolling the campground area with a rifle with rubber bullets. Attempt was to discourage bear approach to the campground. That weekend a cub got into the bear proof dumpster and couldn't get out. The mother was furious and she was rolling that steel dumpster as if it was nothing to get her cub out. The Rangers had to go in with a caged truck to roll the dumpster with the door oriented to allow the cub to get out. Don't know how they got the door open, but the cub did get out.Joebasscat wrote: ↑July 10th, 2022, 9:48 pmSeen them twice, once was a full on camp invasion. Recommend a wide berth.jerrytheplater wrote: ↑July 8th, 2022, 6:48 pmAdd in bear canisters inside the dry bags. Although we didn't see any sign even of four footed wildlife. We camped on islands small enough not to be able to support a bear.
A mother with 5 cubs walked through my back yard a few years ago. She adopted some of those cubs. I was walking out my back door to go cut the grass and we both scared one another. I ran back in and she sent the cubs up trees while she jumped the fence into the neighbors yard. Ended up they grabbed a garbage bag and set it down in the middle of the street to chow down. Mom was teaching cubs where the food was-pretty sad. Wrong food.