Butterhill Road and Main Street Franconia
your questions seem to be:
1 Did you encounter a bear,
2 what did you do...
and curiously, "(I know what the books say to do)"
personally, assuming the "books" are written by zoologists, park rangers, and other naturalists who professionally study bears and collect wisdom from numerous sources, I would do what those books say to do! ...As opposed to cherry-picking anecdotal evidence.
Apparently bears are a common topic on VFTT, e.g. "Best Animal Control Tool" by Bigearl
HTML:
http://www.vftt.org/forums/showthread.php?t=18595&highlight=bear+advice
nuisance bears as a “people problem”...
HTML:
http://www.vftt.org/forums/showthread.php?t=7635&highlight=nuisance+bear
etc.
thinking more about how your questions were posed, I can start to see an interest in "realism" or "practice vs. theory" angle.
i.e. we probably have all read the same books about bears, and other hazards / challenges / beauties of backpacking because we're all responsible, curious, and safety-wise hikers.... (right?!)... who practice continuous self-education in Nature's classroom...
So perhaps you're coming from this angle: "did you remember to do what you read in the book when you finally came face to face with the object of your fear?"...
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(apologies for interminable circumlocutious preamble)
ok, so now for my bear stories:
1) White Cap and Kennebago Divide North Maine (NEHH)-
in the fall, hiking solo, I smelled the bear before I saw him (just like they said i might) - i'd describe the scent politely as a "warm, heavy musky smell". (or impolitely as "a really big fart" - just trying to be descriptive).
a few steps later I see a large black animal on all fours about 40 yards in front of me and just about the time I think "OMG It's a bear!", the bear looks up and sees me too. I'd guess-timate 175 pounds (bigger than me).
yes, there was a moment of acute awareness of my immediate surroundings, but fear soon abated. what could I do? not much basically. "don't run, don't panic" came to mind. "stand tall and make noise if necessary"...
so... I stood there. I did nothing.
(yup, just like Christopher Walken in The Dead Zone
).
nervousness gave way to fascination and gratitude for the gift of seeing this wonderful creature. I did get out my camera from my pack pocket (shoulder strap mounted - quite useful) but b/c it was in very dark shade under thick canopy and far away I accepted that photos probably would not work.
before I got a chance to snap a picture, it sauntered off into even thicker brush.
I waited for a few minutes, watching the last known whereabouts intently, and pondered retreat to the car, because the bear had been in my "direct path"... a valley leading to a col between White Cap and Kennebago (IIRC).
chronic peakbagger that I am
I just
had to continue because the effort I'd invested so far seemed too much to let go of (that's a very long drive on 4-wheeling roads). at first I tried a herd path skirting to one side, which only later re-joined the original herd path i had been on. oh well.
I continued and completed the peakbagging, which had enough challenges bushwacking to forget about the bear at least part of the time!
2) Butterhill Road Franconia NH May 2008
if you're not familiar with this road, it can be very empty of cars and people for long periods of time.
training for a triathlon - solo again - I had just biked up hill to a relatively flat stretch when I saw a big black dog walking down the middle of the paved road away from me.
ohhhh... that's
not a dog, is it?!
apparently I was downwind from it, as it leisurely strolled with it's back to me, sniffing at the breeze occassionally.
I wanted to get back to my car, which was parked another mile down the road, past the bear. ah, decisions, decisions.
I felt a bit safer this time, because I was on a bicycle, and I guessed that while I can not outrun a bear, I could almost certainly bike faster than a bear, especially down Butter Hill. (although biking fast down that hill poses dangers of its own. no such thing as zero risk).
I followed him slowly for a short while, but thought I had better not surprise him. so while still about 50 yards away I stopped, stood, yelled, and waved my arms.
He turned around and looked at me for a while. "seconds seem like hours" as they say.
then he returned to his original course, pausing to look back at me every few yards.
I decided to cautiously follow, hoping he would exit the road to the woods, sooner rather than later.
honestly, I don't know why I felt safe to continue, other than context... just being there, it seemed clear that he (or she?) was going somewhere, and had little or no interest in me, except for avoiding me, perhaps.
just as the bear got to the edge of the road, and looked like it would enter someone's front yard (enormous multi-acre lot) I got close enough to pass on the other side of the road. I suppose that was 30 feet - the width of a paved road - that separated us?
I just rode along at a walking pace, watching him watching me.
I looked back a few times at 40 and 80 feet, etc. then felt a sigh of relief when i was definitely in the clear.
and I kicked myself for not having a camera!
3) Main Street and Butter Hill Road Franconia August 2 2008
I felt especially prepared for the Top Notch triathlon, after all, I'd already met a bear in training, what else could happen?!
well, I could meet the same bear?!
I guess I was somewhere near the front 1/3rd of the race of about 300 contestants, and we were spread out, mostly single file, with spaces of up to 6 bike lengths in between individuals and groups of bikes, nearing the foot of Butterhill road when I saw a bear.
All of a sudden, it ran out of the woods on the left side of the road, barreled across the road right in front of me, and leaped into the woods on the right, with just enough time for me and the nearest triathletes to express our surprise in various colorful metaphors.
so what did I do?
just keep truckin'
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in case anyone's interested - these seem useful:
American Bear Association
HTML:
http://www.americanbear.org/awareness/camping-hiking.html
Bearman's, although that's about Grizzleys...
HTML:
http://www.yellowstone-bearman.com/b_spray.html