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Author Topic: ‘Bears always run away'  (Read 4343 times)

Offline billythekidrock

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‘Bears always run away'
« on: June 08, 2008, 01:34:00 PM »
http://www.bakercityherald.com/news/story.cfm?story_no=6690

Bears always run away
Published: June 4, 2008
By JAYSON JACOBY
Baker City Herald

When the bear just up the hill roared, Joshua McKim's first thought was that he had never heard a bear make a sound like that.

His second thought, almost instantaneous with the first, was that he was awfully glad he had brought his pistol on this mushroom-picking trip.

When he first glimpsed the bear through the thick brush, McKim had cocked the hammer on the .45 caliber semi-automatic Taurus, a copy of the famous 1911-model Colt.

The bear didn't move.

McKim, 22, who has picked mushrooms and hunted deer and elk in the Wallowa Mountains above his hometown of Halfway since he was a boy, has seen maybe 20 bears.

And every one had fled, rumbling away from him in that awkward but oddly efficient gait peculiar to bears.

But this bear just stood there, no more than 35 yard away, staring down at McKim.

"I was saying, why isn't he running away — the wind's blowing right at him so he must be able to smell me," McKim said, recounting what happened a week ago today, on the evening of May 28.

"This is really weird. Bears always run away. Maybe I should holler at him."

The bear hollered first.

Then, finally, the bear started moving.

Right at McKim.

McKim yelled.

"He kind of hesitated for a second," McKim said.

"Then he came on. Faster."

McKim fired the first of the eight bullets in the .45's clip.

"The first shot hit him in the shoulder."

The bear tumbled, rolling for about 10 feet until it came to a flat place.

McKim had just enough time to recognize that the bear, which had cinnamon-colored fur, was not a grizzly but a black bear.

Black bears, despite their common name, sometimes have brown or cinnamon-shaded fur that makes them look quite like a grizzly.

McKim didn't think the bear was a grizzly — they are officially extinct in Oregon although people occasionally claim to see one in the Wallowas or in Hells Canyon.

But the bear sure acted more like an aggressive grizzly than a shy black bear.

And it was bigger than any bear McKim had seen.

As it rolled, though, McKim saw that the bear lacked the grizzly's distinctive shoulder hump.

This was scant comfort, though, because a black bear, though not a predator on par with the grizzly, is quite capable of killing a person.

The bear righted itself and kept moving, not directly at McKim but in his direction.

The bear was closer now, 15 yards or so.

McKim pulled the trigger until the clip was empty.

"I knew I was hitting him; I didn't know where," he said. "I wasn't about to let him get any closer."

The bear careened into a patch of brush and McKim couldn't see the animal.

"I wasn't about to go into the brush with a wounded bear in there," he said. "I couldn't see much."

Besides, he was out of bullets.

McKim walked half a mile or so to where half a dozen of his relatives and friends were looking for morels.

His dad, Ivan McKim, found the bear, dead, beneath a tree.

"I had walked right by him twice, but the tree had overhanging branches and it was pretty dark in there," Joshua McKim said.

He gutted the bear, figuring the State Police could salvage the meat and donate it to local food banks.

The bear's stomach was empty, and his teeth had been ground to nubs.

"I guess he was really hungry and he thought I looked like an easy meal," McKim said. "Or maybe I was right in the middle of his mushroom patch."

McKim drove back to Halfway and called Oregon State Police.

The next morning he met Sr. Trooper Chris Hawkins, and they drove in Hawkins' patrol pickup truck to the site along Beecher Creek, a tributary of East Pine Creek.

The pair dragged the bear to Hawkins' truck.

Hawkins, who works in OSP's Fish and Wildlife Division, drove to his office in Baker City, where he skinned the bear.

He found several bullet wounds, including holes in the bear's shoulder and in its chest.

The position of the wounds confirmed McKim's account that when he fired, the bear was moving toward him.

Also, one of .45 slugs, which travel much slower than, say, a rifle bullet, penetrated the bear's thick hide and lodged in a lung, Hawkins said.

All this proved to Hawkins' satisfaction that, as McKim said, the bear was quite close to him when he fired.

"Everything lined up with just what he said," Hawkins said. "He did the right thing by calling us. We appreciate that."

There was a bear-hunting season going on last week, but McKim didn't have a tag.

You don't need a tag, of course, to legally shoot a bear that charges you.

But because McKim didn't have a tag, he can't keep either the bear's meat or its hide, Hawkins said.

OSP gave the meat to food banks and disposed of the hide, he said.

McKim said he's a bit disappointed that memories will be his only mementoes of his bear encounter.

Based on the measurements of the bear's skull, the animal, which probably was about 10 years old, would have qualified for Oregon's record book for hunting trophies, McKim said.

Mainly, though, he's relieved that the bear was the incident's lone casualty.

McKim figures it was good fortune that he, the only person in his mushroom-picking group who had a gun, came across the bear.

Just 15 minutes or so earlier, McKim had decided to separate from the rest of the pickers to check a place where he had found morels before.

Evening was coming on and a light rain was falling, and McKim wanted a quick look before the rest of the bunch decided to go back to Halfway.

That contingent included his 20-month-old niece, Opal Burnette, who lives in Bend.

Opal's mom, Tonya Burnette, who's McKim's sister, said she was wheeling Opal in her stroller when Joshua had his confrontation with the bear.

"I'm just really happy that nobody got hurt out of the deal," Joshua said. "I'm alive; I guess that's what counts.

"And I'm really glad I had that gun."

He even found a few morels which, though you can't make a handsome rug out of them, are pretty tasty fried in a pan with a bit of butter.




Offline Ghost Hunter

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #1 on: June 08, 2008, 01:52:17 PM »
Why can't it happen to me :dunno:
Economy failure = Too many people spending money they don't have on things they don't need to impress people they don't like.

Offline Gutpile

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #2 on: June 08, 2008, 03:17:56 PM »
Why can't it happen to me :dunno:

My thoughts exactly!

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Offline Wea300mag

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #3 on: June 08, 2008, 04:20:28 PM »
This is the closest I've been to that situation, glad it didn't charge because the bear would have laughed at my 9mm bullets.

http://hunting-washington.com/smf/index.php/topic,1831.0.html
Keep your nose in the wind and your eyes on the skyline

Offline robb92

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #4 on: June 08, 2008, 07:18:48 PM »
what a story!!! Lucky that he wasn't hurt.
"ITS NOT WHAT THE WISE MAN SAYS BUT WHAT THE WISE MAN DOES IN HIS LIFE THAT MATTERS"


Offline shanevg

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #5 on: June 09, 2008, 02:44:54 PM »
Kinda dumb he's not allowed to keep the meat.  I understand about the hide, but why not let him keep the meat if his story is verified?

I know it's illegal to take any meat or antlers from a roadkill and stuff in Washington and I've always wondered why.  I talked to my (future) father-in-law about it and he said it is because they give the meat to food banks and stuff if they get to the kill on time.  Well, over Memorial Day I was camping in Winthrop at Twin Lakes.  My neighbor was camping with us and while going to town with his wife and daughter one day they saw a game warden pull over on the side of the road.  They slowed down in time to see a still moving doe (must've just been hit) and the game warden got out and shot it and then got back in his truck and drove away.  So obviously they didn't do anything with the meat other than just leave it there. 

I understand the rules are in place to discourage poaching, but still, they should be doing something with the meat shouldn't they?  Is there any way in Washington that if you go through the loops the right way you can keep the meat, or are they just stubborn about it? 

Offline Gutpile

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #6 on: June 09, 2008, 03:56:39 PM »
I spoke to a guy at the Inland Northwest Wildlife Council who was on a roadkill volunteer crew. He got called out all the time on these types of situations. The warden may have called them or a group like them. Lets hope anyways.

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Offline DeKuma

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #7 on: June 09, 2008, 03:57:28 PM »
They usually have a special service that comes out and picks up the animals.  At least from what I have seen.  They bring a truck with a small crane hoist and pick them up.  Possibly the officer called it in and they would dispatch the other truck to the site.
- Scott

Offline shanevg

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #8 on: June 09, 2008, 04:06:13 PM »
I spoke to a guy at the Inland Northwest Wildlife Council who was on a roadkill volunteer crew. He got called out all the time on these types of situations. The warden may have called them or a group like them. Lets hope anyways.

Well my neighbor saw him shoot the deer on Saturday and when we left on Monday the deer was still there, all bloated with flies swarming all over it.  So perhaps he did call a truck out, but they definitely did not get there in time to salvage any of the meat.  I told my neighbor he should've stopped and asked if he could have it, but he didn't want to worry about butchering a deer while camping with his wife and daughter and her friend.  So yeah, the deer we saw, definitely did not become someone's meal, it was left to rot. 

Offline Gutpile

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Re: ‘Bears always run away'
« Reply #9 on: June 09, 2008, 05:57:23 PM »
Bummer. :(  I'd like it for coyote bait. ;)

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