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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Avoiding bear problems

Tips provided as new camping season begins

As a new camping season begins in Utah, wildlife officials are urging people to keep their campsites clean and to not feed black bears.

"Because black bears are wild animals, they're usually afraid of people," says Kevin Bunnell, mammals program coordinator for the Division of Wildlife Resources.

"That changes as soon as they start associating people with a place to get food," Bunnell says. "They start to lose their fear of people and can become aggressive and dangerous."

"Food is what attracts bears to people," Bunnell says. By following a few simple rules, people can virtually eliminate problems with bears:

* Keep your campsite clean. Don't scatter garbage, food scraps and fat drippings around your campsite, and don't leave them in your fire pit. Place them in an air tight container and take them home with you.
* Keep the cooking grills and utensils in your camping area clean.
* Don't leave food out. Instead, store food and coolers in the trunk of your car, in your camping trailer, in a bear proof container (please remember: plastic garbage cans and plastic food storage containers are NOT bear proof), or suspended at least 12 feet high between two trees, so bears can't reach them.
* Never intentionally feed bears by leaving food out for them.
* Bears have an incredible sense of smell, so make sure you cook away from your tent or sleeping area. Also, don't sleep in the clothes you cooked in or wore while cleaning fish. Leave those clothes, along with utensils, rags and anything else used in food preparation, cooking, eating and clean up, at your cooking area or sealed inside a vehicle.

Bunnell says when people don't follow these rules, wildlife biologists and conservation officers aren't left with many options.

"If this is the first time a bear has just gotten into trouble, we'll haze it with rubber bullets or hounds, or we'll try and capture it. Sometimes these experiences will scare the bear enough that it won't visit that campground again," he says.

"Unfortunately, these methods only work with bears that are brand new to a campground. Bears that have already associated a campground with food will come back to the campground as soon as we move them to a new area."

Bunnell says bears have an incredible homing ability. They can find their way back to an area that's as far as 100 miles away from where they've been moved to.

"It's difficult for our biologists to find remote sites to move 'problem' bears to. If we move a bear, often all we've done is shift the problem to a new area of the state," he says. "The bear is used to looking to campgrounds for food. It will roam and find a campground in any area we place it in."

Bunnell says when a bear returns to an area that it's been moved from, or when a bear poses a threat to people, the DWR has no choice but to euthanize the bear. "It's very simple to avoid putting a bear in a situation where it has to be killed to protect the public," he says. "We hope people will help the bears by following our advice this year."

Free safety materials

Safety tips and a brochure titled "Living in Black Bear Country" are available for free at wildlife.utah.gov/bear/bear_safety.php. You can also call the nearest Division of Wildlife Resources office, or the DWR's Salt Lake City office at (801) 538-4700, for more information.

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Thursday, January 25, 2007

Black Bear Applications Accepted Only On the Web This Year

Applications for Utah black bear hunting permits will be accepted only through the Internet this year.

You can apply for a permit at wildlife.utah.gov beginning Feb. 1.

Applications must be received through the Web site no later than 11 p.m. on Feb. 28 to be included in the draw for permits. Draw results will be available by March 29.

"In the past, black bear hunters could apply through the Internet, or with a paper application," says Judi Tutorow, wildlife licensing for the DWR. "Because so many people have access to the Internet now, and there are so many advantages to applying online, we won't be accepting paper applications for black bear permits this year."

Tutorow says when you apply online, you can submit your application in a matter of minutes. After you submit your application, you'll receive a confirmation that it was completed correctly and that it will be entered in the draw.

If you make a mistake while applying, the system will warn you about the mistake so you can correct it.

"The Internet provides so many advantages that it doesn't make sense to apply any other way," Tutorow says.

In 2006, more than 6,400 hunters applied for a Utah black bear permit. Of the more than 6,400 hunters, only 230 applied with a paper application. Every year, about 100 hunters who applied with a paper application the year before switch to the Internet and apply online. "Based on that trend, we believe there will be about 100 hunters who wanted to apply with a paper application this year," she says.

If you don't have a computer, Tutorow says there are plenty of places to find one. "If you don't have access to the Internet, come into a DWR office," she says. "You can use one of our computers, and we'd be happy to help you apply.

"Public libraries also have computers and librarians who can help you use them. And you probably know someone who has a computer in their home and would be happy to help you use it."

If you have questions, or need assistance, please call the DWR's Salt Lake City office at (801) 538-4700.

Get Permission First

Tutorow encourages hunters to obtain written permission from landowners before applying for a hunt that occurs on private land. "Written permission is required to hunt private property, and we encourage hunters to obtain that permission before applying," Tutorow says. "We don't want hunters to draw a permit and then find they can't use it because landowners won't give them permission to hunt the area."

The DWR doesn't have a list of people who own land where black bear hunts occur, so hunters need to take the time needed to locate the landowners.

Less than 25 percent of Utah's black bear hunts occur on private property. Hunts that do occur on private property are indicated by an asterisk in the 2007 Utah Black Bear Proclamation, which will be available by Feb. 1.

Utah's spring bear season runs April 7 - May 31. The state's fall hunt runs Aug. 25 - Sept. 30 and Nov. 1 - 25.

For more information, call Utah Wildlife Administrative Services at 1-800-221-0659, the nearest Division of Wildlife Resources office or the DWR's Salt Lake City office at (801) 538-4700.

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