British Columbia

Bear 'bluff charges' Port Coquitlam woman after being hit by car

Conservations officers are on the lookout for a young bear that "bluff charged" a Port Coquitlam woman in her driveway after it had been hit by a car.

Injured and frightened bear was on the defensive and had no intention of attacking says conservation officer

Conservation officers are on the lookout for a young black bear that may be injured after being hit by a car in Port Coquitlam. (Jeff McInstosh/Canadian Press)

Conservation officers are on the lookout for a young bear that "bluff charged" a Port Coquitlam woman in her driveway after it had been hit by a car Wednesday morning. 

Metro Vancouver conservation officer Clayton Debruin says the chain of events started when the woman and her young child returned to their home in the 3300 block of Cedar Drive, startling the bear who may have been sleeping.

The animal then ran onto the road and was hit by a passing car before coming back towards the woman who was trying to get her child out of the car.

"Black bears have an instinctual defence mechanism," Debruin told CBC News. "When they feel threatened it is very common for them to charge without the intent to actually attack."

Common defence mechanism

"Typically black bears want nothing to do with humans — they're very timid, very low risk of attack," he said. "But when they find themselves in a threatening situation they tend to use their size and a quick sort of charge to assess the person or animal. It's a common defense mechanism, it's rarely followed through on."

Debruin says conservation officers have been searching the area for the bear since yesterday, paying special attention to trees because injured black bears have a tendency to tree themselves.

"We don't know the extent of the injuries but we suspect he's left the area which is a good sign because if he's mobile it's more likely he'll survive on his own," said Debruin.

He believes the bear was attracted to the neighbourhood by garbage, and says people need to secure their garbage and get rid of bear attractants like bird feeders.

Neither the woman nor her child were injured.

With files from Farrah Merali