国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

black bear
(Photo: Jared Lloyd/Moment/Getty)

Some Appalachian Campgrounds Are Closing Due to Hungry Bears

Encounters between bruins and campers led the forest service to shutter the areas

Published: 
from Backpacker
black bear
(Photo: Jared Lloyd/Moment/Getty)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Officials have closed part of the Appalachian Trail to camping due to reports of aggressive bears approaching hikers, following several similar closures over the past few years.

The announced on Wednesday that the Forest Service had closed approximately 7 miles of the trail along the North Carolina/Tennessee border, spanning from Tanyard Gap to Deep Gap (NOBO miles 280.8 to 287.7), to camping after a number of hikers reported bear encounters. The closure includes a campsite at Rich Mountain, as well as the Spring Mountain Shelter.

鈥淎ll area visitors should use caution, pack out all trash and food scraps, and never leave food unattended,鈥 the ATC wrote. 鈥淥vernight hikers should plan their itineraries accordingly to avoid camping in this section or find an alternative route.鈥

Overly bold bruins have been a problem for hikers in North Carolina and Tennessee over the past several years, with a number of shelters and campsites closing temporarily after the food-conditioned animals began seeking out sustenance from hikers. In 2021, the USFS in Tennessee to camping because of bear activity. Further closures followed in 2022: In October, officials closed the trail to camping from the Tennessee-Virginia border to the trail鈥檚 intersection with Highway 421, while earlier in the year New Jersey closed a campsite after a bear attempted to enter a hiker鈥檚 tent.

In its post, the ATC noted that the Forest Service issued a food storage order last month requiring hikers along the trail in the USFS鈥檚 Southern Region鈥攅ssentially everything south of Shenandoah鈥攖o keep their smellables in a bear canister, a vehicle, land manager-provided vessels like bear lockers, or in a proper bear hang. (Though if you weren鈥檛 doing that already, well, )

Lead Photo: Jared Lloyd/Moment/Getty

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online