Old Harbor, Alaska. Population : 218.

Wiki : The community of Old Harbor has its origins in the era of Russian conquest. On August 14, 1784, Grigory Shelikhov with 130 Russian fur traders massacred (see Awa'uq Massacre) several hundred Qik’rtarmiut Sugpiat tribe of Alutiiq men, women and children at Refuge Rock, a tiny stack island off the eastern coast of Sitkalidak Island. In Alutiiq, this sacred place is known as Awa'uq ("to become numb").



A few years ago when the nearby mountaintop site was being constructed, the construction crew camped out at the end of this little spit. One morning about 2am, everyone was woken by the sound of a tremendous battle and screams of bear cubs... so the next morning before they went up to the top of the mountain in the helicopter, they swung over to the beach to the left in this picture. What happened is a big male Kodiak attacked and killed two cubs during the night and the mother desperately tried to protect them to no avail. Males will kill cubs that are not theirs in order to bring the female back into the breeding cycle.

Pretty brutal, but that's nature.



On approach to the site above the spit in the previous picture :



It's standard procedure to circle the site a couple of times while everyone on board scans the area for bears before setting down. For some reason our pilot didn't do this here, and as we flared to touch down, the guy to my right elbowed me in the ribs and pointed - I looked, and there was a 10 footer hauling ass away from the site. I called over the intercom to the pilot that we had a Kodiak at 9 O'clock, and he powered back on and lifted back up to check it out.

Here's the sobering part : 45 minutes later, we finished our task and lifted off, flying down the opposite side of the mountain. Guess who was 500 yards away and closing? Yep, it was this same bear.

It's not the first time I've seen an aggressive bear circle around for a surprise attack from the rear, and that's what this one was doing. Another 10 - 15 minutes on the ground and I'd have one hell of a story to relate to you.

Hard to get any reference here, but this slope is incredibly steep - and that bear is really flying down the mountain. Look for him in the upper part of the picture in the middle. That's one extremely dangerous bear :