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'Em-bear-assed' B.C. saviour gets mouthful of pepper spray helping bear

The black bear was found trapped inside a fenced waste disposal enclosure on Vancouver Island
241216sookebearencounter
Robb McCaghren came to the rescue of a bear seemingly trapped in a fenced waste disposal area in Sooke.

An em-bear-assing encounter with one of Vancouver Island’s four-legged wild neighbours left a man with more than just the proverbial egg on his face – he got a pump of bear spray.

When Sooke resident Robb McCaghren set off for an evening walk with his 14-year-old son Devlin and their dog, their adventure was cut short when they discovered a black bear trapped inside their strata’s fenced waste disposal enclosure.

While the bear had been able to scale the “fortress-like” enclosure, it seemingly was unable to get back out, says McCaghren.

“It wasn't being aggressive, it was obviously panicked and really wanted to get out of there,” he said. “It looked like it had been trapped in there for a while … there were claw marks on the inside from where it was trying to get out.” 

McCaghren decided he had to help.

Armed with a can of bear spray in case the bear decided to charge him, McCaghren’s plan was to kick open the sliding door to the enclosure and free the wild animal.

He also wanted to give the bear a fright, believing it to be the same bear which had rifled through the strata’s garbage the night before.

“A bear habituated to eating garbage is a dead bear, so I just wanted to scare it away,” said McCaghren.

But his plan went awry. When McCaghren kicked the door open, the force sent him stumbling backwards.

“I’m 6”10’, so my centre of gravity is quite high,” he said. “I ended up running backwards at full speed for about 10 feet before I went down.”

When he landed, the can of bear spray fired for “less than a second,” but it was enough to cause McCaghren some pain and discomfort. Standing downwind, his teenage son also copped a mouthful of the potent irritant.

“We were both sputtering and coughing,” said McCaghren.

The commotion had also attracted an audience of McCaghren’s new neighbours – he and his family moved to Sooke from Naniamo in late November.

This was the family's first bear encounter. 

“I was thoroughly embarrassed that all of my neighbours had just watched me fall on my arse,” he said. “But they all had a good chuckle at my expense.”

As for the bear, McCaghren says the animal left the way it had arrived, back over the fence.

“It ended up being so spooked by the door flying open that it catapulted over the fence on the inside and disappeared,” he said.

And so far, the bear has not returned.

“I think he was so embarrassed by what he witnessed that he isn't willing to come back again, it did the job, he hasn't been in the garbage again,” McCaghren said.

The strata has also expedited plans to provide bear-proof metal bins, to ensure all attractants are secured.

By the next day, McCraghren had recovered from the effects of the bear spray, however, his bruised ego, not so much.

But he hopes the tale will bring some light relief to people’s days.

“I was a street kid for years,” he says. “And my wife and I have been together for 16 years, and the only reason that we've survived this long is because we find humour in the worst situations. 

“If you can laugh at yourself, then nothing's gonna bother you.”



Ben Fenlon

About the Author: Ben Fenlon

Multimedia journalist with the Greater Victoria news team.
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