Hilldweller
SE Expedition Society
We've hiked trails in northern Alberta down to the Mexican line and, out there, the only thing that actually got in our faces was a pair of elk bulls; another hiker woke them up as they snoozed (remarkably concealed) in some tall grass. Startled the daylights out of us.Some scary ****- in Ocala National
Forest we have stumbled on bears twice but fortunately nothing exciting. Came of it . Were going to be running the continental divide trail up-to canada from colorado in a 4x4 but making time for a daily hike as well. The bears up there seem much larger and occasionally much more aggressive than the bears in Florida or north Carolina, so trying to get prepared in the best way possible.
A grizzly charged at our Jeep in Glacier but I just punched it and went. Ran into a ranger a few minutes later that was on his trail. Ranger said, "good you left; that's a bad bear..."
The rest of the griz and black bears we've seen didn't give us any notice. They were usually just foraging weren't interested in a fuss. But, then again, we don't give them any reason to fuss.
Keep a very clean camp, make noise as you hike, maintain situational awareness.