NewsCyclist defends against bear attack with quick thinking and a bike in BC

Cyclist defends against bear attack with quick thinking and a bike in BC

A man was riding a bicycle through the forest when he encountered a bear. He defended himself in an unusual way.
A man was riding a bicycle through the forest when he encountered a bear. He defended himself in an unusual way.
Images source: © Pixabay

1:21 PM EDT, July 27, 2024

A man from British Columbia was riding his bike through the forest when he suddenly encountered a mother bear with cubs on his path. In an unusual turn of events, he defended himself from the attack using his bike, hitting the confused animal on the snout. Fortunately, the cyclist emerged from the dangerous situation unscathed.

Forest ranger Matthew Corbett reported to the Victoria News portal that the man was biking along a forest trail towards Anderson Flats National Park, in the western part of British Columbia, when he encountered a mother bear with two cubs foraging for berries.

The mother bear is known to forest rangers and had previously run away at the sight of humans. However, as Corbett mentioned, this time, she was likely startled by the cyclist and attacked him, pinning him to the ground.

The cyclist placed his bike between himself and the animal, protecting himself from bites. He remembered an old piece of advice: if you hit a bear on the nose, it will run away. He followed this advice, and the mother bear indeed fled.

The Forest Service warns tourists

The Forest Service does not intend to search for the mother bear, assuming it was just a defensive attack.

Public broadcaster CBC recalled a similar story from 2017 on its portal about a man, also from British Columbia, who was attacked by a young grizzly and who defended himself by first hitting the animal on the nose, and then with a piece of wood lying nearby.

British Columbia is bear country. It doesn't matter where you live or spend your free time; even in urban areas, you will be close to bears and their habitats, warned the British Columbia Ministry of Environment for 30 years.
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