It’s that time of year when our local bear population is beginning to wake back up and they are hungry! Bears excel at acting in what they perceive are their best interests: finding food, finding shelter, finding mates, raising their cubs, and coexisting with each other. But they have no clue that avoiding the human population would be in their long-term best interests. That is why we are offering you the following article from BearWise.org to make sure we do our part to be BearWise at home.

Long Winter’s Nap Ends

By the end of April most bears have left their dens for good. The days lengthen, temperatures warm up and spring arrives, bringing with it nutritious spring grasses and budding plants. In areas where snow covered the ground, the spring melt often reveals the carcasses of animals that died over the winter as well as the last fruits, nuts and berries of fall, all good food for hungry bears. One bear in California was observed following its nose for more than three miles directly to the carcass of a winter-killed deer.

Wake Up And Smell The Ants

After acclimating to the world, bears start feeding on early spring greenery as well as any insects they can find, including ants, bees and termites.

Fun fact: Ant colonies give off formic acid and have a distinct odor (to a bear). So does insulation made with formaldehyde. That often includes hot tub covers, bicycle seats and many insulated materials made of vinyl. A bear poking around your hot tub may think it’s discovered a gigantic ant hill.

The Search For Food

Hibernating bears can lose twenty to fifty percent of their body weight over the winter; bears are still living off their fat reserves in the spring. So, after a few days of drinking water, eating some roughage and stretching their legs, bears begin searching for more food. Bears have great memories, so bears that learned to rely on high-calorie, human-provided food sources last year make a beeline for the bounty. Now’s the time to take down your bird feeders, secure the garbage and make sure pet food is safely stashed inside.

Fun Fact: All bears (except sloth bears) have 42 teeth. Teeth begin erupting while cubs are still in the den, starting with deciduous canines, followed by deciduous incisors, and then molars. Most deciduous teeth have come in before or soon after cubs come out of their dens. Those deciduous “baby” teeth will be replaced by permanent teeth by the time the bear is two years old.

Rude Awakenings

Sometimes bears den up in places that make the bear biologists who study them scratch their heads, like inside culverts or down in gullies that can flood when spring rains come or snow melt swells streams. One Virginia bear was flooded out of her river bottom den and ended up snoozing on top of a 15-foot-high pile of storm debris. More than one bear has been rudely awakened by a homeowner discovering it denned up under the porch. Bears that have denned up near homes or highways may startle the human neighbors when they wake up and head out.

Cubs Get A Look At Their World

Mothers with cubs born earlier this year are the last bears to emerge from their dens. By eight to ten weeks old, healthy black bear cubs have grown from the size of a stick of butter at birth to four to eight pounds. The baby-fine hair they were born with is turning into a protective fur coat.

Black bear cubs still spend a lot of time nursing on their mom’s high-fat, extra-nutritious milk. Nursing cubs often sound as if they are purring. (view 12-second video of a nursing cub). In April, cubs become much more active. Cubs born in ground dens may hang around the entrance watching the world and playing with each other. Mother bears continue to keep the youngsters and the den clean.

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