Het is vandaag vijftien jaar geleden dat de Canadese mountainbikester Isabelle Dubé werd gedood door een grizzlybeer tijdens een jogging met enkele vriendinnen.
Isabelle Dube was running with two friends on a hiking trail near a golf course in the town located 90 kilometres west of Calgary. The group rounded a bend and saw the bear about 20 to 25 metres ahead of them, on the same path.
Dube chose to climb a tree but was pulled down by the 198-pound bear, said Dave Ealey, a spokesperson for Alberta Sustainable Resource Development.
Her two companions backed away slowly until they could no longer see their friend. They didn’t see the attack, but could hear Dube shouting at the bear as they sprinted the almost half-kilometre distance to the clubhouse at the SilverTip Golf Course.
A wildlife officer, accompanied by one of the women, returned to the site of the attack, where the officer killed the bear with a single shot.
Ealey said: “The bear was not aggressive, it behaved as a bear its typical age and sex would.”
People who do encounter grizzlies should back away slowly and leave the area. Running away could trigger the bear to attack. While grizzly bears can climb trees, it’s not typical behaviour, said Ealey.
Dube, 36, was married and had a five-year-old young daughter. She was a competitive mountain biker and she and a partner came third in a seven-day, 600-kilometre bike race last year. She was the first person killed by a bear in Alberta since 1998, but of course one could hardly avoid thinking of the death of biathlete Mary Beth Miller in Québec on July 2, 2000.
Alcide: “La biathlète Mary Beth Miller, 24 ans, a été retrouvée sans vie dans un sentier de biathlon près de la base militaire de Valcartier. Elle aurait vraisemblablement été tuée par un ours. La police de la Haute Saint-Charles confirme qu’il y avait des traces de pattes d’ours près du corps. La victime, partie s’entraîner dans un sentier, portait également des traces de morsures au cou. Une autopsie devrait permettre de déterminer la cause exacte de son décès. Mary Beth Miller, membre de l’équipe canadienne de biathlon, est originaire de Yellowknife, dans les Territoires du Nord-Ouest. La femme avait quitté vers 9 heures dimanche matin pour aller s’entraîner. Elle n’avait pas été revue depuis. Les attaques d’ours sont plutôt rares au Québec. La dernière charge mortelle d’un ours remonte à 1983 dans le parc de La Vérendrye.”