We came to a bend in the Teklanika River and saw a lone grizzly walking away from us. Was this the mother and cubs we saw earlier? We advanced. Now 100 meters away, we saw a mom and two cubs.
We had to get North past them to our wilderness camp, and we didn’t want to leave the river bed yet – a canyon, topographically-speaking – and our fastest way home in the frigid Alaskan fall evening. We decided to get loud and hope to scare them away, something that goes against every human instinct.
But we yelled anyway, and the bear became stirred, seemingly running towards us before disappearing into the bush. My hand was on the bear spray… ready… Keenan got behind me. (Later we talked about how a charging bear would need to make a choice between us, and Keenan was sure she would choose the “blue guy,” the color of his rain jacket.)
But after 10 seconds we realized she wasn’t charging and advanced again, hoping they had disappeared into the surrounding forest. Nope. There she was again, dead ahead. My heart was racing… it felt like our last chance before figuring out a Plan B.
We both gave sinister growls. I pressed my eyes into the binoculars. Through magnification, I saw the mom lift up on her hind legs, staring directly at us. She was huge! Seemingly 15-feet-tall in her new stance. “Dammit,” I said uneasily. It was just us and the bears and they weren’t moving.
“We’ve provoked her and she has cubs… we have to find a way around.” “But what if we do, and she’s still there, still coming towards our camp?” “That’d be really bad, but we can’t think about that yet.” “OK, so we’ll cross the river, scramble up the bank, traverse the tundra plateau, and hopefully be ahead of them.” “You realize that means we’re going to have do at least four water crossings right?” “Yeah.” “Fuck, it’s already 20-degrees, supposed to be 8 tonight… we can’t stay out wet, and there’s one more hour of twilight.” “Well, we better get going then.”
I put my camera in my bag, and we stomped across three of the four river arm crossings. Calf deep, not bad… but now our boots were soaked. We’d be frozen if we had to stop moving. I cursed myself for not bringing the stove… after all, this is Alaska. If I’d ever met a piece of land that cared about me, it certainly wasn’t here.
Up on the tundra plateau, we crashed through thick brush on an animal trail, passing fresh caribou kill and wolf tracks in the 1/4 inch of new snow. We ran. It was a tense 30 minutes.
Finally, we poked our heads out of the brush and scanned the river below. No Bear! Only one more river crossing – depth unknown – separating us from camp. It was swift, but we scouted the best crossing in the last remnants of light. It was almost waist deep, but we made it without being swept away.
Back at camp, we celebrated, inhaling the last of our whiskey and a few bites of food as the temperature plummeted in the clear night. The grizzly bear would no longer be a mystery written by the fear-mongers. We had made good decisions and were at camp feeling an intoxicating connection to the Wild. It was the kind of day that would bring us back time-and-time again to Denali National Park.