I was carrying this
at the time. Not sure of the strength.
Strong enough to stop me for 45 minutes!
I see LOTS of bear tracks when skiing the Mendocino National Forest every week.
And have seen a lot of bears while mt. biking the backcountry around here (Napa Valley).
Lots of wild boar around as well.
Another story:
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Last summer, I was exploring a forgotten, overgrown and unnamed road out in the middle of nowhere.
Broad daylight.
20 minutes on the bike from my house.
The road had turned into a wildlife highway. Great descent on a steep ridge.
I often hear leaves rustling. Typical squirrel or bird foraging, right?
This time, I stopped my descent down the ridge.
That's a lot of squirrels...
The rustling of leaves was traveling... from left to right.
What the Hull?
As I stood there, I saw several large animals. About the size of a large dog.
My heart jumped. Are those dogs? Hunters?
Wrong season.
Am I trespassing?
Then more of them. It was hard to see through the manzanita.
They were definitely on a mission. Heading across the trail to the right.
Then one of them crossed the trail a little closer.
HOLY SH!T! It's a wild boar! Male. Huge tusks.
He stopped and looked at me.
My heart froze. I was prepared to place the bike in front of me to block his charge.
I looked around for the nearest tree to climb.
I got nothing!
But the sounder of pigs were still traveling from left to right. More of them still crossing the trail.
The big male turned and continued on.
Must have been 15 - 20 of them.
Then one more male came of the the Toyon, Madrone and manzanita, closer to me.
He also stopped to stare me down...
Lucky for me, he carried on as well. Whatever mission they were on was more important than me.
I breathed a sigh of relief as the rustling of leaves quieted.
I stood there for a few more seconds waiting and listening.
Are there more of them?
Yup - sounds like someone else is coming.
But the rustling leaves stopped just short of the trail.
I stared into the brush to try and locate what I assumed was the trailing pig.
Then I saw it. I could see the ears.
Wait - those aren't pigs ears. Too round. Way too large.
That...that...that's a
BEAR!
The large, furry beast was standing there on all fours, just staring at me.
I didn't know what to do.
Should I make some noise and scare it away? Keep still and wait?
I realized my helmet cam was not on.
Damn!
The pigs would have been cool to capture on video.
The bear was still there.
Probably about 30 seconds - it felt like 10 minutes - still staring each other down.
I finally decided to move. My first choice was to turn on the helmet cam.
He wasn't leaving.
I decided to keep quiet. Then I got bored of staring at him, so I continued on down the ridge.
The bear followed me down the ridge, about 20 feet to my left for several minutes.
Then veered off and I was alone again.
This was my first time riding this trail. I named the steep, overgrown ridge road - which was more of a trail
Bearpig Ridge.
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Pic of a black bear in Long Canyon, north of Lake Berryessa.
Saw a huge bear out there another time. He also tracked me along for about 10 minutes.
Freaky!