The Bear Bell
I’m sure you see this before. You come home, walk out behind the house, and
there they are. Footprints at the base
of your windows. It’s one thing when
they are human, and you have a lowlife peeping tom to contend with. It’s something else entirely when the paw
prints are from a member of the Ursus family; a black bear.
You see the claw marks at the edge of the glass, and the
meaning is clear. If he had thumbs, he
would have raised the window. And he
walked all around the house, looking for one that was open. Luckily, they were all closed tight and
latched.
How long before he realizes he can just break the glass?
I asked some of the people further up the mountain what I
should do. Bear Bell, a few old timers
told me. A good size Bear Bell will chase
most any critter away. And a Bear Bell
backed up by a Winchester 94 rifle is an unbeatable combination. I took their advice.
I sawed off a tree near the house, and cut a flat face for
the bracket. It took some muscle and a
big drill to get the thing up there, but it’s mounted solid. I rigged a rope back to the house, so I can
ring it in safety. For the first few
days, everything was fine.
I rang the Bear Bell, and the sound rang loud, and
true. Birds, raccoons, and weasels
scattered at its sound. It seemed like I
was all set. I rang the bell every night
before bed, and the pawprints round the house faded away with the wind and the
rain. There were no more bloody patches
of fur on the lawn, when I came out in the morning. For the first time in years, I thought it
might be safe to walk outside at night, without a gun and a light.
I went to bed with a new sense of security, until 2:45
AM. That’s when I heard it. Clang!
There was a pause, then two more clangs and crash. At first I was startled, and then I felt the
cold chill. There is nothing more
disturbing that the sound of your Bear Bell, being rung by something other than
you. A big something too, one that’s
large enough to swing the handle six feet off the ground. In the middle of a cold dark night.
I grabbed the rifle from beside the bed and ran quickly but
quietly out the door at the other corner of the house. Turning the corner, I flicked on the light to
illuminate a gray shape, moving fast toward the woods. I fired two quick shots before it vanished
into the brush.
As the sound of the shot echoed away I heard a rustle behind
me and turned. Nothing was visible but
the brush a dozen yards back was swaying slightly. I turned back to where I’d fired the shots.
Walking to the spot, I saw bright fresh blood spattered on
the ground. Just then, the coyotes
started howling, very close by, and I remembered there were only five more
rounds left in the gun. I hurried back
inside and bolted the door.
Now it’s morning. The
Bell is still standing, and the coyotes and weasels run from the sound, but
there are Bigger Creatures out there, and they seem to see my Bell as a
challenge. Tonight, I’m going to bait
Snake’s old #15 bear trap with a dead rabbit, and chain it down about ten feet
from the bell. We’ll see what happens
next.
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Texy Lee ;)