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FLATHEADBEACON.COM NEWS
AUGUST 6, 2014 | 7
Just
Sayin’...
“I knew there was a possibility it could end badly. The grizzly jumped up and stood at attention. The guy seemed kind of frozen for a second, but then he acted quickly and got off the trail.”
Philip Granrud, who photographed a chance meeting between a grizzly and a hiker on the Highline Trail in Glacier National Park.
“The Lord told me ... if (the local sheriff doesn’t) take away these arms from federal agents, we the people will have to face these arms in a civil war. He said, ‘This is your chance to straighten this thing up.’”
Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy on the inspiration for his April standoff with federal authorities
“Instead of the one dose as required under the protocol, A.D.C. injected 15 separate doses of the drug combination, resulting in the most prolonged execution in recent memory.”
Dale A. Baich, one of the lawyers who represented Arizona Department of Corrections inmate Joseph R. Wood III. Wood was killed by lethal injection on July 23, but the procedure lasted nearly two hours before he died.
COURTESY OF PHILIP GRANRUD PHOTOGRAPHY
Grizzly Bear Clears the Highline Trail
Hikers forced to abandon Glacier trail when grizzly bear comes through
By XAVIER FLORY of the Beacon
If you’re going to run into a grizzly bear, best to do it away from 150-foot cliffs.
But that is exactly what happened to a North Carolina hiker who crossed a grizzly on the Highline Trail in Glacier National Park this past week. When the bear and the hiker rounded a bend and saw each other, they both stood still for a second, before the hiker scrambled down the steep embank- ment and waited for the grizzly to pass, according to an eyewitness.
Photographer Philip Granrud, who observed the scene from Oberlin Bend on the Going-to-the-Sun Road, took a dramatic shot of the hiker hiding behind a boulder while the bear continued on the Highline.
“I wanted to show that all the bear wanted to do was to get from point A to point B. I’m a firm believer after going into Glacier National Park and photographing hundreds of bears, that generally bears just want to be left alone,” Granrud said.
Granrud watched the bear jump down onto the Highline Trail, and when he saw the lone hiker walking in the opposite direction, “it was obvious they were going to meet in the worst possible place,” he said.
“I knew there was a possibility it could end badly. The grizzly jumped up and stood at attention. The guy seemed kind of frozen for a second, but then he acted quickly and got off the trail.”
As the bear continued down the trail, other hikers cleared the path, but no one else had to slide down a steep embankment in order to avoid it, and no one tried to run away from the grizzly, according to Gran- rud.
This happened only days after a Texas
man pepper sprayed and shot a bear on Mount Brown Lookout Trail in Glacier National Park. The Texan said the bear charged him, and if so, it would not be the first case of bear aggression in the park this season. A female jogger was attacked by a bear north of Columbia Falls at the begin- ning of July, and a black bear had to be euth- anized later that month after he charged a family picnicking in the park.
Although the North Carolina hiker acted quickly once confronted with the bear, he violated one of the cardinal rules that park officials recommend to stay safe: don’t hike alone. In order to avoid bear con- frontations, park officials also recommend hikers make plenty of noise while hiking; avoid hiking at dawn and dusk; observe bears from a distance; and leave a clean camp. Generally bears avoid humans and will only attack when surprised or if they feel threatened.
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