USA TODAY US Edition

Brushes with bears closing trails

- Liz Overton WBIR-TV

Officials in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park closed several trails and backcountr­y campsites over the weekend after a bear encounter sent a teenager to the hospital.

A 16-year-old boy from Ohio was hurt Saturday night when a bear pulled him from his hammock around 10:30 p.m., park officials said.

Park officials said the father and son were on a backpackin­g trip in the Smokies. Both were sleeping in hammocks about 10 feet apart and they properly stored their packs, equipment and food with aerial storage cables.

“It sounds like the son and father were doing the right things,” park spokeswoma­n Dana Soehn said. “(It was) just a very rare and unusual situation.”

The teen’s father drove the bear away. The two then hiked to the shore of the lake. Some campers had a boat and transporte­d the two across the lake to Cable Cove boat dock where emergency personnel met them. The father and son were then airlifted to Mission Hospital in Asheville, N.C., around 3 a.m.

Park officials said the teenager received several injuries, including cuts to the head. He never lost consciousn­ess and was in stable condition.

This is the ninth bear incident this year, according to Soehn.

“Historical­ly May and June are very difficult times for bears in the Smokies,” she said. “The natural summer foods have not come in yet, so we’re waiting for berries to ripen. And historical­ly, after the summer foods come in, we see far less aggressive bear behavior.”

Following the incident, park officials closed several of the trails and backcountr­y campsites. They also closed Derrick Knob shelter along the Appalachia­n Trail until rangers can determine whether recent bear activity at the shelter may involve the same bear.

“While incidents with bears are rare, we ask park visitors to take necessary precaution­s while hiking in bear country and comply with all backcountr­y closures,” said park superinten­dent Cassius Cash in a press release. “The safety of our visitors is our No. 1 priority.”

 ?? WBIR ?? A 16-year-old boy from Ohio was hurt Saturday night when a bear pulled him from his hammock.
WBIR A 16-year-old boy from Ohio was hurt Saturday night when a bear pulled him from his hammock.

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