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LibbyMt.com > News > March 2005 > Tips for Bear-Proofing your home

Tips for Bear-Proofing your home
March 19, 2005

Tips for Bear-Proofing your home:

Around the Yard:
• It is best not to have bird feeders, but if you do, bird and hummingbird feeders should be hung 10 feet up and 4 feet out from a stout support such as a tree, with a rope and pulley system for refilling them.
• Do not put out salt licks, grain, or deer blocks to attract wild animals as these create areas of concentrated animal scent that will then draw in bears and mountain lions.
• Pet food should be stored indoors or in a bear-resistant container. If you must feed pets outdoors, sweep up any spilled food immediately and bring bowls in at night.
• Barbeque grills should be cleaned and stored after each use in a secure shed or garage.
• Fruit should be picked from trees when ripe and fallen fruit immediately collected. Do not allow fruit to rot on the ground. Electric fencing is the best way to protect larger orchards.
• Compost piles should be limited to grass, leaves, and garden clippings, and turn piles regularly. Adding lime can reduce smells and help decomposition. Do not add food scraps. Kitchen scraps can be composted indoors in a worm box with minimum odor and the finished compost can later be added to garden soil.
• Gardens should be harvested immediately as vegetables, fruits and herbs mature. Locate gardens away from forests and shrubs that bears may use for cover and where possible protect them with electric fencing. Blood meal used in gardens will also attract bears.
• Use native plant landscaping whenever possible. Be aware that a watered lawn with lush grass, clover and dandelions is an attractive feeding sites for bears.
• Beehives, honey and bee larvae are especially attractive to bears. If you keep hives, elevate them on bear-proof platforms or protect them with electric fence.

Garbage:
• Store garbage in bear-resistant garbage cans or dumpsters, or, store food-related garbage in a secure building bears can’t get into.
• Securely store empty recyclables, such as pop cans, indoors—the sweet smells attract bears.
• Decrease odors by storing garbage in tightly tied, heavy-duty bags, and garbage cans with tight lids.
• Store especially smelly garbage, such as meat or fish scraps, in a freezer until they can be taken to a refuse site.
• Remove garbage regularly.


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