Current:Home > Markets'Crazy day': Black bear collides with, swipes runner in Yosemite National Park -Excel Wealth Summit
'Crazy day': Black bear collides with, swipes runner in Yosemite National Park
Ethermac Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 17:13:09
You would think running 50 mountainous miles would be enough of a challenge. But just before finishing his run Sunday night in Yosemite National Park, Jon-Kyle Mohr had a collision – with a large black bear.
With less than a mile remaining in his run on a day when temperatures in the park hit 107 degrees, Mohr saw a large dark shape coming at him, then felt "some sharpness," in his shoulder, he told the Los Angeles Times Monday.
Next came a shove that sent the ultrarunner careening in the dark. When he collected himself, Mohr turned to see headlamps and hear people shouting, "Bear!" the Times reported.
Mohr told the Times that his watch indicated he had begun his run from his home in June Lake in California's eastern Sierra Nevada mountains, 15 hours and 59 minutes before the encounter. He was less than a mile from his planned finish in Yosemite Valley.
“It was just a really strange, random collision,” he told the Times. “If I had rested my feet for 20 seconds longer at any point over the 16 hours, it wouldn’t have happened.”
California man responds when he saw bear 'coming back at me'
Bears have become "very active" in Yosemite Valley, often searching for ripening berries to munch, the National Park Service says in an online notice. So far in 2024, Yosemite National Park lists 10 bear incidents after recording 38 in 2023.
Yosemite National Park biologists had tagged and placed a GPS radio collar on a bear Sunday morning after it found food at the Cathedral Beach picnic area in the park, Yosemite National Park spokesman Scott Gediman told USA TODAY in a statement.
Then, at about 9 p.m., the bear found a bag of trash in the Upper Pines Campground and ran with it onto Happy Isles Road when he collided with a trail runner, Gediman said, adding that "biologists do not consider this encounter to be a predatory attack."
With bear activity being high this time of year, campers must properly store food and trash and give wildlife space to keep people and bears safe, Gediman said. "Black bears are constantly looking for food and generally try to avoid people," he said.
If you encounter a bear, the National Park Services recommends gathering whoever is with you into a group and making noise, yelling "as loudly and aggressively as possible at the bear until it leaves."
Don't approach or chase the bear or throw anything at it. "If visitors encounter a bear in a developed area, act immediately and scare it away by yelling aggressively and loudly until it leaves," Gediman said.
That type of response helped Mohr. His collision with the bear knocked a bag of garbage from its mouth and the bear "was coming back at me," he told the Times.
Mohr, 33, started yelling and hitting his running poles on the pavement, he said. People in a nearby campground also began shouting and created a clamor by banging pots and pans, he said.
Their collective efforts drove off the bear. When he checked his body, Mohr said he had two substantial and bloody scratches; the bear had torn through his hoodie and shirt, also ripping some holes in his running vest.
Medics arrived in an ambulance and bandaged him up, but Mohr didn't go to a hospital.
Park rangers told Mohr the bear had been tranquilized Sunday morning and fitted with a tracking collar. “It sounds like the bear and I had equally crazy days,” Mohr told the Times.
Less than 24 hours after the attack, Mohr told the Times he felt lucky, saying the bear “if it seriously wanted to inflict any kind of actual harm, it totally could have.”
Follow Mike Snider on X and Threads: @mikesnider & mikegsnider.
What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day
veryGood! (91197)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Woman dies in West Virginia’s second reported coal mining fatality of 2024
- Historic Investments and Accountability Push Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Efforts In Right Direction, Says EPA Mid-Atlantic Administrator
- Kehlani announces Crash concert tour: How to get tickets
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Beaconcto Trading Center: What is Bitcoin?
- Olympic chaos ensues as Argentina has tying goal taken away nearly two hours after delay
- A new fossil shows an animal unlike any we've seen before. And it looks like a taco.
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- ‘Pregnancy nose’ videos go viral. Here's the problem with the trend.
Ranking
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Watch this trapped lamb reunited with its distressed mom by two Good Samaritan hikers
- Michael Phelps Shares Mental Health Advice for 2024 Paris Olympians
- Def Leppard, Journey and Steve Miller romp through five hours of rock sing-alongs
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Halle Berry poses semi-nude with her rescue cats to celebrate 20 years of 'Catwoman'
- Mixed results in 2024 standardized tests for Louisiana students
- Whale capsizes boat off Portsmouth, New Hampshire in incredible video recorded by teen
Recommendation
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Beaconcto Trading Center: Bitcoin and blockchain dictionary
2 more state troopers who were part of the Karen Read case are under investigation, police say
A whale flipped a fishing boat with people on board: Was it on purpose?
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
How hard is fencing? We had a U.S. Olympian show us. Watch how it went
Strike Chain Trading Center: Approved for listing: A decade in the making, reflecting on the journey of Ethereum ETF #2
Billy Ray Cyrus Tells Ex Firerose “See You in Court” After Release of Shocking Argument