Lesson Learned??
So, there I was minding my own business.. and out of nowhere I spotted a bear feeding in a meadow.
I took quite a few decent shots but could never really get close enough for what I was wanting. The bear hung out for quite a while and finally wandered back off into the woods. And for most people that would have been enough, but for a few of you who know me probably could guess what I did next. Of course I followed it....
Well somehow the bear got up on a hill and behind me, and to make a long story short, the next thing I knew I hear a branch break, I spun around to see a fairly large black bear coming straight down the hill at me at full speed. I stood my ground and raised the camera, and tried to make myself look like I would be much more of a problem than I proably would have been. And much to my suprise ( and delight ), the bear changed directions about 15 feet or so away from me.
The following pictures are the bear during the turn and on it way back up the hill and then at the top giving me the stare while he's catching his breath.. I know the focus is bad but it is what it is.. and no I didn't get any shots of him coming down the hill
So, did I learn my lesson about following a bear into the woods?? Naaahhh
I took quite a few decent shots but could never really get close enough for what I was wanting. The bear hung out for quite a while and finally wandered back off into the woods. And for most people that would have been enough, but for a few of you who know me probably could guess what I did next. Of course I followed it....
Well somehow the bear got up on a hill and behind me, and to make a long story short, the next thing I knew I hear a branch break, I spun around to see a fairly large black bear coming straight down the hill at me at full speed. I stood my ground and raised the camera, and tried to make myself look like I would be much more of a problem than I proably would have been. And much to my suprise ( and delight ), the bear changed directions about 15 feet or so away from me.
The following pictures are the bear during the turn and on it way back up the hill and then at the top giving me the stare while he's catching his breath.. I know the focus is bad but it is what it is.. and no I didn't get any shots of him coming down the hill
So, did I learn my lesson about following a bear into the woods?? Naaahhh
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But if your last line is actually how you feel, I have reservations about your judgment.
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
but would be: 'does a photographer who follows a bear into the woods s--t in his pants?'-
george
I constantly have reservations about my judgement...
I will watch my back a little better in the future, I still don't know how he got behind me. Unless of course it was a different bear.
www.edhughesphoto.com
Wow...... :uhoh
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Yeah I was alone in the woods, the girls were at the other side of the meadow near the car. I wouldn't let them come with me in an area I didn't know.
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It's only a cuddly bear, for crying out loud
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Hmmmm, Sid you were there with us at yosemite weren't you. Didn't you hear about ed chasing bears then? See I read this and it's just the same ole Ed to me. Just means if he invites you shooting you have to bring a bag full of steaks with ya, kinda like if you go shooting with Andy. Only difference is with ed the steak will be to distract the bear instead of andy so you can get away.
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Maybe he only got close enough to see the Canon in your hand and then took off running for fear.
Everyone knows, bears favor Nikon quality . . .
I knew, of course, that trees and plants had roots, stems, bark, branches and foliage that reached up toward the light. But I was coming to realize that the real magician was light itself.
Edward Steichen
It's what they do, double back and come at you from above. I'd considered myself lucky nothing more came of it.
Only problem I see is I wasn't there, sounds like fun and exciting shootin
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Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
Bears are dangerous? Wait a second now I'm the one who is confused. I thought they just ate hunny out of bee hives and stole picnic baskets.
In all seriousness though everything is dangerous. Problem was he was alone, and lost track of what was going on around him. Can't let that happen.
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Ever looked at an old life magazine? They didn't give a rats behind most of the time about focus and blur (well I mean, I'm sure they did, but they made it "bad" on purpose often). Somehow it just worked...this one does that for me. Not sure why, but I just really really like this one.
Just stop wearing your muske cologne
LMAO! :lol
- Kevin
Sid, Bears are dangerous creatures, Black Bears though are probably the least dangerous of the bunch, they ALMOST never attack humans. And personally, I have never heard of an attack on a human where the bear wasn't provoked or backed into a corner. Very seldom will a black bear even attack in defence of cubs.
I agree it could happen, but more often than not I feel more threatened on the freeway.
What the bear did was a bluff charge, meant to scare me away or let me know I wasn't welcome. I probably invaded his personal space and he was calling me on it.
I know it sounded like I was making light of the situation, but believe me I took it seriously. And things could have gone different. If it had been a grizzly I probably wouldn't be typing this right now, but then again I never would have followed a grizzly into the woods.
But since they won't come to my house so I can get a picture, I have to go to theirs.
A couple of Black Bear facts:
Recorded killings by black bears this century total only 28 across North America
The 500,000 black bears in North America kill fewer than one person per 3 years, on the average, despite hundreds of thousands of encounters.
To put this in perspective, for each death from a black bear across North America, there are approximately 17 deaths from spiders, 25 deaths from snakes, 67 deaths from dogs, 150 deaths from tornadoes, 180 deaths from bees and wasps, 374 deaths from lightning, and 90,000 homicides in the United States alone (data from the National Center for Health Statistics, 1980-1983).
www.edhughesphoto.com
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
I didn't think you were giving me a hard time..
www.edhughesphoto.com
http://www.wate.com/Global/story.asp?S=4770543&nav=menu7_2_2
happened just recently
by the way, those are neat statistics, but my underpants, that want to stay clean, say those odds might increase dramatically the closer you are to a bear-
george
Wild animals are just that. Wild.
More people are injured at Yellowstone park every year by buffalo than any other animal.
Then there was the sucking pluff mud!
Snakes? If I get bitten I will worry then.
Bears???? Where? I could follow Ed, he would be the bait!
I like that one photo, too.
ginger
Once bitten twice shy.... Obviously you are still waiting to get bitten to become a little shy rofl
Neat shots though
Stan
Be honest...did you fill your pans with last night dinner and when he came in smell-range he turned away?
Well, we all glad it turnes out allright.
Thanks for sharing.
Dick.
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Did you ever read or hear about the nut case guy who camped out on bear trails, and sang to them? NO huh, well he won't be telling any more bear stories, because he became bear poop.
Glad all is well, but maybe, I'm just saying maybe here, you might want to consider a longer lense that would keep you out of paw swat, mock charge, oops! not mock charge range.
Sam
wiki here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Treadwell
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nickwphoto
I've seen that movie a couple of times, I'm nowhere near that crazy or careless. If you've never seen it, check it out. Treadwell was "out there" to say the least.
www.edhughesphoto.com
Thanks Nick, and don't worry I'll be careful.
www.edhughesphoto.com
your camp site. The standard is to throw rocks and bang pots and pans.
On the trail, it depends where the wind is blowing and other factors. But
generally speaking, bears don't want to be around people. This is different
where bears have frequent contact with people and where people do stupid
things (like feed them, leave food in places it is easily accessible or don't
properly deal with your trash).
What Ed did was right. Had he run, you may well have read about him in the
paper. The one criticism would be not paying attention to where the bear
was going (or if others were nearby).
Of course the wild is just that. Wild. What works in many situations may
not work in all. In otherwords, your milage may vary.
Thanks for sharing Ed.
ian
I'm sure Sid only wants you and your family the best...
And I'm afraid to say I'd probably do what you've done.. Kinda runs in the veins
Any Mono shots lately? And I totally missed Bodie..
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