Los Angeles Times

A mountain village finds itself in hungry bears’ crosshairs

At Pine Mountain Club in Kern County, home and vehicle break-ins are a recurring source of stress, as well as community division

- By Louis Sahagún reporting from pine mountain club, calif.

Led by a sense of smell 100 times keener than that of humans, the predators have crashed through windows, ripped tiles off roofs and torn solid wood doors off their hinges to get at leftover pizza in a refrigerat­or.

They have also defecated on counters, furniture and floors as a “calling card,” officials say.

In a region of Southern California that wildlife authoritie­s call a human-black bear conflict zone, the impending arrival of spring in this small mountain village is met with dread and fear as the hungry giants emerge from their winter torpor to search for food.

“Bears are a major problem here — and it’s getting worse,” said Patrice Stimpson, patrol chief of Pine Mountain Club — a community of some 2,800 residents in the San Emigdio Mountains, about 75 miles north of Los Angeles.

“They’ve caused hundreds of thousands of dollars in property damage,” Stimpson said. “Last year, a house caught fire after a bear climbed onto the gas stove and turned on the burners. A few cars were nearly totaled by bears rummaging for crushed cookies between the seats.”

Wildlife authoritie­s across the nation have been reporting an increase in humanblack bear interactio­ns for decades, and this is especially true in California, where urban growth — as well as increasing­ly severe wildfires and drought — has caused a growing number of bears to seek food in areas dominated by humans.

Although crowded tourist enclaves such as Lake Tahoe and Mammoth Lakes are well known for bear incidents — particular­ly those in which the animals are struck and killed by vehicles — the ursines are also being reported along the Central Coast and in the Transverse Ranges of Southern California, where they were never seen 50 years ago.

At Kern County’s Pine Mountain Club, where annual black bear invasions began in earnest about a decade ago,

home and vehicle break-ins are a recurring source of stress, as well as community division. While some residents urge peaceful coexistenc­e with the bears, others want to see them eradicated.

A particular point of contention in the conflict has been the deliberate feeding of bears. Tempers have flared in community gatherings, homeowner meetings, on the pages of newspapers and on social media sites, with some local activists demanding that people who feed bears be prosecuted. (It is illegal to deliberate­ly feed a black bear in California, and penalties may include a fine or jail time.)

The number of calls to Stimpson’s office seeking wildlife assistance has reached a record high of 563 for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2023. That’s up from 319 the previous year. “Ninety-nine percent of those calls involved bears,” she said.

The number of entries into homes and sheds has also increased. There were 322 entries recorded in 2023, up from 311 the previous year, according to Vicky Kraft, a community activist whose Los Padres Bear Aware group tries to keep track of them. The group also recorded 179 vehicle break-ins last year.

Early this month, three homes were invaded in as many days.

“We have too many habituated bears and people who keep feeding them,” Kraft said. “If I had the power to do it, I’d remove the bears — all of them.”

That kind of talk rankles James Weinstock, 75, who has made feeding wildlife around his home, including two bears he calls Cinnamon and Blackie, part of his daily routine.

“I love bears; they’re just big puppy dogs,” he said. “Getting along with these critters is the right thing to do. It pleases the Lord.”

But no friendship is completely free of conflict.

Take the time in 2021 when, Weinstock said, he left his backdoor open, allowing the briny aroma of a fish sandwich sitting on a washing machine to beckon a hungry bear into his home.

“That bear was already eating my lunch when I hit him in the head with a baseball bat,” he recalled. “The bear got up and took a swing at me.”

“It took a lot of skin off my arm,” he added, rolling up a shirtsleev­e that hid several crimson scars on his right arm.

It’s not just residents who are suffering property losses and the risk of serious injury, however. Often overlooked in California’s ursine onslaught are the debilitati­ng injuries suffered by bears as they forage for food and water in developed areas. The animals often suffer laceration­s to their heads, backs and legs from broken glass, or ingest toxic household substances such as laundry detergent, motor oil and carpet cleaner.

In conversati­ons with anyone who will listen, Todd Greisen, general manager of the Pine Mountain Club Property Owners Assn., continues to argue that “it is extremely important to report damage to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. The more people report, the more state resources our area will be assigned. We need help.”

Some people here, however, question that recommenda­tion. That’s partly because reports of vacationer­s in Airbnb and other shortterm rentals luring black bears with raspberrie­s and strips of bacon tossed off the decks of mountain chalets could hamper lucrative income streams.

“Only a small number of incidents are reported to us,” said Chris De Tar, a human-wildlife conflict specialist with the state Department of Fish and Wildlife. “There are a few reasons for that, including a misconcept­ion that if you report a conflict our department will euthanize the bear.”

Distressin­g face-to-face encounters are not the only effect the bears have on daily life.

Killing a bear, which is legally classified as a game mammal, without a depredatio­n permit is a misdemeano­r punishable by up to one year’s imprisonme­nt, a fine of up to $10,000, or both. In addition, dischargin­g of firearms and shooting a bow and arrow within the Pine Mountain Club developmen­t are strictly prohibited.

But several bears have been shot and killed in Pine Mountain Club without depredatio­n permits over the last decade. Many more have been killed in vehicle collisions.

In 2014, when at least three bears were shot and killed here, state and federal wildlife authoritie­s investigat­ed reports of illegal bear traps set along neighborho­od streets and in surroundin­g Los Padres National Forest land.

In 2022, a $10,000 reward was offered for informatio­n leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever was responsibl­e for shooting a bear with a bow and arrow. That animal was found lying in a neighborho­od street with an arrow sticking out of its back, patrol officials said.

Tensions between communitie­s and wild predators have become more common across the West in recent decades as wildlife conservati­onists and government agencies have advocated coexistenc­e with the animals, rather than exterminat­ion.

In places such as Pine Mountain Club, it is hard to find a balance that is sustainabl­e.

Los Padres Bear Aware warns that living with bears here requires special precaution­s: Keep vehicles locked with no scented items inside, including air freshener. Remove child car seats and wash the car seat frequently. Never store food or scented items in crawl spaces, sheds and garages.

Do not leave the doors of homes and cars unlocked, because habituated bears can open them.

Efforts to prevent scary bear entries run the gamut.

Some residents say hazing techniques — such as banging pots and pans together, waving arms and shouting, “Shoo, bear! Shoo!” — can effectivel­y keep bears away from homes, garages and sheds.

Others recommend placing “bear unwelcome mats” bristling with half-inch-long nails sticking out of the fabric in front of doors and windows, and around property boundaries.

Then there’s Ian Sawry, a retired police officer and member of Pine Mountain Club’s volunteer emergency response team, who plans this month to market a homemade security system designed to zap intruding bears with an uncomforta­ble jolt of electricit­y via wires strung up across doors and windows.

“The effect is similar to the shock you’d get from a 9volt battery, only a little sharper,” said Sawry, who is not an electricia­n. “To prove its safety to potential customers, I’m using my own house as a demo.”

The rise in break-ins has brought growing concern for public safety, so Stimpson’s patrol team occasional­ly uses paintball guns as a deterrent.

“We shoot the bears in the rear,” she said, “and it sends them running.”

Although it’s commonly assumed that black bears sleep while in hibernatio­n, this is not the case. Instead, they survive the wind and cold of winter by retreating to dens and shelters in a state of torpor, a temporary sluggish condition that saves energy when traditiona­l food sources such as berries, acorns and fawns are scarce.

But as developmen­t spreads to Southern California wildlands, black bears can remain active throughout the year because of the abundance of accessible human food in garbage cans, gardens, homes and vehicles. This type of habituatio­n is a particular problem, state wildlife authoritie­s say, and officials are still grappling with how to approach the issue.

“We’re seeing hundreds of bear entries each year in our little community,” Sawry said. “Can you imagine the uproar if they were home burglaries instead of bear break-ins?”

For residents of Pine Mountain Club, there are already plenty of signs that they are entering what is likely to be a very active bear season.

Recently, patrol officer Jeff Fredericks wheeled his pickup truck over a carpet of freshly fallen snow and into the Pine Mountain Club’s maintenanc­e yard, where he scanned for bears.

No predatory eyes returned his stare, but unnerving evidence of their recent presence was impossible to miss: a door torn off its hinges, splintered windowsill­s, twisted metal siding and muddy paw prints on the windows of a shed containing a ravaged refrigerat­or, which had been used to store employees’ sack lunches.

“The bears started hitting this place a lot last summer,” he said. “Now they’re back, and there’s only so much we can do.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ??
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times
 ?? Cody Miller ?? SOME BEARS can stay active throughout the year because of abundant, accessible sources of human food. Above, a dumpster raider in Pine Mountain Club, Calif.
Cody Miller SOME BEARS can stay active throughout the year because of abundant, accessible sources of human food. Above, a dumpster raider in Pine Mountain Club, Calif.
 ?? Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? JAMES WEINSTOCK feeds two bears as part of his daily routine at his home in Pine Mountain Club, Calif.
Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times JAMES WEINSTOCK feeds two bears as part of his daily routine at his home in Pine Mountain Club, Calif.
 ?? ?? NOT ALL bear encounters are friendly. Weinstock says he was scratched on the arm by a bear he hit with a bat after it entered his home and began eating his food.
NOT ALL bear encounters are friendly. Weinstock says he was scratched on the arm by a bear he hit with a bat after it entered his home and began eating his food.
 ?? ?? AN ELECTRIC fence serves as a bear deterrent at a village restaurant. The animals have been known to tear down doors to get at leftover pizza in a refrigerat­or.
AN ELECTRIC fence serves as a bear deterrent at a village restaurant. The animals have been known to tear down doors to get at leftover pizza in a refrigerat­or.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States