Warning

 

Close

Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Confirm Cancel
BCM
User Panel

Posted: 12/31/2002 9:08:33 PM EDT
When people from the lower 48 hear that I live in Alaska, they always ask me what it's like here.  I was hoping to start a thread or series of threads that they can all come and read and perhaps bring more traffic to our Alaskan forum.  I'll start with this one - since I don't even have to write it .  It is an email I recieved today.

The sender (Fish and Wildlife Service Officer) is a friend of mine, I will edit out his info though.


This story is true and it affected me at my place of work.  As a Contracting Officer for US Fish & Wildlife Service here in Anchorage, AK, I did the Purchase Order to get this Polar Bear's hide tanned after a scared radar site crew skinned this bear out as required by law.  Next time some anti-gunner tells you to keep your gun(s) locked up in your safe, remember this story for there's other dangerous animals that roam city streets and walk on 2 legs a lot worse than this unlucky Polar Bear that was hungry and just looking for something to eat in the wilds of Alaska.

xxxxxx x. xxxxxxxxxx



----- Original Message -----
From: Tyler xxxxxx
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, December 30, 2002 8:47 PM
Subject: the polar bear incident








Tundra Terror

by Larry Mueller and Margueritte Reiss

November 24, 1993 -- "You fellows stay alert." The security guard's words hung as a coda to the grim report that had just been delivered to the tiny population of Oliktok Point radar site: Two polar bears were definitely roaming nearby, and a third had been seen in the vicinity earlier.

It seemed the bears were drawn to the tiny outpost near the Beaufort Sea in northernmost Alaska by butchered bowhead whale meat that Inupiat Indians had stored near their fishing cabins, a mere 300 yards away. Under ideal conditions, polar bears are able to smell food from 20 miles. With the bears already in the neighborhood, it was only a matter of time before they investigated cooking odors and garbage coming from the radar site as well. Oliktok Point once housed dozens of military personnel as a link in the "DEW line," the United States' highly secret Distant Early Warning defense network guarding against over-the-pole attack from the Soviet Union. But with the thawing of the Cold War, the site crew was gradually pared down to a civilian staff of six, and security patrols had been eliminated. Which is why sympathetic ARCO security guards from the nearby Kuparuk oil field frequently shared what they knew with Oliktok personnel.

Alex Polakoff, 53, a hunter and 13-year veteran of the DEW line sites but a recent arrival at Oliktok, took bears very seriously. He had heard the horror stories. In 1985, a polar bear stuck its head through the kitchen window and had to be beaten back with a pool cue and iron skillet. Another time, a driver delivering water from Prudhoe Bay was chased up a 20-foot fuel tank ladder by a bear that surprised him from behind his truck. A site worker ran it off with a bulldozer. The next bear in camp was a grizzly. Back in 1990, near Point Lay radar site over on the Arctic Ocean, an Inupiat couple were confronted by an emaciated polar bear as they walked down a dark street. To secure his pregnant girlfriend's escape, the courageous 28-year-old man faced down the bear with his pocketknife. Fifty pounds of his body were eaten.

Polakoff's fellow Oliktok crew member, mechanic Don Chaffin, 55, was less concerned, almost cavalier, about polar bears. On one occasion Polakoff complained that the site's Chevy Suburban ought to be plugged into the living quarters building to keep the engine from freezing, arguing that he shouldn't have to risk a 200-yard walk in the dark to the garage every time he was required to go to the air strip in the middle of the night. Chaffin chided him. "Alex is afraid the polar bears will get him." True. Polakoff had also been frustrated by what he considered the lack of concern exhibited by both the Air Force, which owned the site, and Martin Marietta Services, which had contracted to run it.

Oliktok was built in the 1950s by sledding 20-by-20-foot insulated aluminum modules into place, raising them onto pilings and joining them end to end. The site was composed of a "train" of these modules 300 feet long in which six men lived and worked. Despite the fact that a leaping polar bear can reach as high as 16 feet, the windowsills built five feet off the floor would serve as "bear-proofing." The six-foot pilings would raise the total height of the windows to 10 or 11 feet above ground level. However, this safety cushion was compromised by road gravel and snowdrifts that had accumulated beside the building. And recent tracks under and along the building indicated that a bear had been looking in the outpost windows -- windows that were snap-in, double-pane and without security bars.

But what clinched the employee's status as bear bait in Polakoff's mind was the firearms rule. Each man could have a rifle, a shotgun and a pistol for hunting and hiking, but they were kept in a locked gun case and signed out as needed. The gun safe was mounted six inches off the floor between some lockers, its lock mounted so low it could be reached only by kneeling. "My room is 30 feet down the hall from the incinerator room (where a snow shovel propped against a broken outside door was all that kept it shut)," says Polakoff. "The inside doors couldn't stop a bear, either. Any hunter knows you're lucky to survive against a bear when you already have a gun in your hands." On November 26, a Nuiqsut villager killed one of the three bears that had been reported by the ARCO guard, and the sense of vigilance intensified around the compound.

Within the next few days, biologist Richard Shideler was even invited to Oliktok to suggest means to better bear-proof the site. His recommendations: increased outdoor lighting; doors that opened outward and closed against strong inside metal frames; bars over the windows; the removal of road material close to buildings; an end to storing garbage cans on the porch; chain link skirting to prevent bears from hiding under buildings; perhaps even substantial iron cages surrounding outside doors so personnel could appraise the situation in safety before leaving. No immediate actions were taken.

At 8:30 p.m. on the night of November 30, just hours after Shideler left, Don Chaffin and support services worker Gary Signs, 38, were sitting on stools at the bar in the day room. Chaffin was hunched over a crossword puzzle, his back to the window. On the bar's opposite side, Signs was working on a report when his peripheral vision caught a movement at the window.

Polar bear!




<cont.>
Link Posted: 12/31/2002 9:09:31 PM EDT
[#1]

Chaffin looked up, saw Signs staring past him and swiveled toward the window. Signs says Chaffin slapped his magazine at the window to frighten off the bear. Chaffin recalls no such action.

"Get out of here!" Signs yelled as he raced to the fire door leading to an adjacent room. The bear's head dropped below the three-foot-wide window frame as Chaffin stumbled over a stool while trying to escape from behind the bar. Signs pulled the magnetic latch, stepped inside the doorway and held the door to their escapeway for Chaffin. After regaining his balance, Chaffin sidestepped the stool and was rounding the bar when he heard glass explode. He looked back and yelled, "Oh, no!" Like smashing ice to get at a seal, the polar bear leaped through the shattered window in a shower of glass, taking the frame with it.

The giant animal landed beside Chaffin and reared up in his terrified face. Chaffin, still several feet from Signs in the doorway, grabbed the bear's muzzle in a attempt to protect himself. But the bear, standing a full foot taller than Chaffin's six feet, stretched its head and neck forward and sunk its teeth into Chaffin's jaw. With almost surperhuman effort, the man pushed against the bear's black nose and tore himself free for an instant, only to have his hand and arm severely bitten. As if experimenting with how best to kill its unusual prey, the bear began swatting its victim.

A terrible realization came to Signs as he watched this bloody encounter. The gun safe was in the next room, but the key was in an office 200 feet away in the opposite direction! Signs would have to scramble around the bear to get to it, and even if he made it, there was a good chance that Chaffin would already be dead by the time he got back." Signs must have thought, "Should I close the door and sacrifice him to save myself and the other four?" The bear solved this dilemma by batting Chaffin's 240-pound body through the doorway. Signs bolted for the opposite door, found a phone, dialed the public address system and screamed, "Bear in building!"

With nothing else at hand, he grabbed a fire extinguisher and rushed back to Chaffin. The bear was on top of his coworker now, biting at the back of his head. Chaffin could feel fangs grating on his skull. He saw flashes of lightening and felt a neck vertebrae snap. He thought blood filling the right eye was blinding him, but in fact the eyeball was now resting on his cheek. He could only weakly cry, "Help me." Signs aimed the extinguisher's nozzle at the polar bear's face. A weak stream of water arced into the bear's face. The bear raised its head and looked at Signs quizzically, then merely resumed its grim work on Chaffin.

Mechanic Joe Peterson, 37, hadn't been able to make out the loud message over the public address system, but he heard a commotion and came running to investigate. Grabbing the extinguisher from Signs, he shouted, "Get the gun case key!" Not a chance, thought Signs. The bear was now 10 feet from the gun cabinet. Even if he already had the key it would be sure suicide to kneel that close to the bear while fiddling with the lock. Right now he had to find something more persuasive than a dribbling fire extinguisher. Signs ran to the hall and grabbed another extinguisher, this time a Halon model that would suck oxygen from the air and produce a hopefully distracting woosh.

He came back into the gun safe room just in time to see Peterson throw the empty extinguisher at the bear. Signs handed the second extinguisher to Peterson and was running for a third when Alex Polakoff arrived on the scene and was able to make out white fur through the thick haze of halon fog. Polakoff's hair stood on end and his strong fear of bears put him in a primal "fight or flight" mode. He raced back to his room and grabbed his fully loaded Mossberg 500. He had brought the gun from his previous work site intending to put it in the gun cabinet, but put it off when he saw the unsafe conditions at Oliktok.

When Polakoff returned. he saw the bear jumping up and down on Chaffin. He approached to within seven feet, squatted so that the slug's upward trajectory would be safely away from his unfortunate coworker and fired into the bear's chest. No visible reaction. Polakoff fired a second slug into the animal's broad chest. The bear arose from Chaffin in slow motion and walked through a door into a small library room. Polakoff stepped to his left and fired two more slugs he hoped would find the bear's chest. Of the four 1 1/4-ounce slugs from the three-inch 12-gauge magnum, one found the polar bear's heart. The animal dropped dead. Signs and Peterson got the key, retrieved their rifles and hurried out to search for any other of the three bears that had been sighted. Polakoff was left behind to make Chaffin comfortable and try to keep him talking so that he wouldn't go into shock.

"I'm cold," the badly mauled man mumbled, choking on his blood. Polakoff covered him with a blanket, slid a pillow under his head and jammed an upholstered chair into the shattered window in an attempt to block the wind current carrying minus 20- to 30-degree temperatures. He had already called the ARCO oil site for an ambulance.In the confusion, the paramedics thought the message was for them to pick up a corpse. They were leisurely driving down the road when Polakoff frantically waved them to the living quarters.

A police officer from Prudhoe Bay, 50 miles away, arrived at 3 a.m. to check out "the shooting" and wanted to confiscate the shotgun. The bear is lying over there -- take a look," Polakoff said. "If you take my gun, take me, too. I'm not staying in this place without it."

Emergency room personnel at Providence Hospital in Anchorage, where Chaffin was being flown, told Betty Chaffin that her husband had been shot in the back of the head and would be dead on arrival. That same misinformation -- probably influenced by a missing patch of scalp at the back of Don Chaffin's head -- even had Polakoff worried when he heard it. Was it possible that a slug hit bone and deflected downward, killing his friend?

It was 6:00 am before a nurse called to say that Chaffin was alive and, in fact, not shot.Eventually, Don Chaffin was left with a numb left leg, a numb right hand which drops things, 500 stitches and 150 staples in the back of his head, seven metal plates in his head, 40 inches of scars in his head and face and double vision (after several operations to his damaged right eye, it still tracks five degrees lower than the left). Although his medical bills are still paid by workman's compensation, he lost all ability to earn a living.

A week after the attack, Richard Shideler found portable lights on loan from ARCO still at the radar site, but no recommended structural changes were initiated. He heard nothing further from either Martin Marietta or the Air Force. At some point, however, one-inch plywood was nailed over the windows.On December 2, 1993, USAF and Martin Marietta personnel visited the site and immediately relaxed the firearms rules: One firearm would be available in each wing.

Signs and Peterson were given plaques and commended for bravery. In a printed reprimand from Martin Marietta, R.E. Cunningham, the manager of communications, electronics and meteorology acknowledged that had it not been for Polakoff's quick response, a far greater tragedy might have occurred. Essentially, the balance of the letter makes it clear that saving a life, and perhaps his own and others as well, was no excuse for violating project policy and procedures



I edited this into paragraphs so it would be easier to read...
Link Posted: 1/5/2003 2:45:20 AM EDT
[#2]
Yeesh. Bear stories. I have a good one.

During summer of 2001 I was working construction up in Prudhoe Bay.  North Slope borough started a policy of locking up garbage and closing the dump to bears, so there were hungry bears wandering around all the camps and shops looking for food.

We came back to the hotel to find a small grizzly bear poking its head around the kitchen dumpster. It was oblivious to us, so three other guys and myself stood by watching it as everyone else piled into the camp for dinner. The bear was maybe 50' away.  We were watching it silently when one guy says "You know, it's probably not smart to be this close." We all yeah "yeah" in agreement, but we just kept watching.

Then the wind shifted so that we were upwind.  The bear suddenly turned its head and looked at us, and like a flash got down on all fours and charged us.

We yelled and ran up the stairs to the hotel's entrance, the bear behind us. We all got inside and slammed the door behind us.

We were laughing, thinking we were safe, when the bear jammed its hairy paw in through a open, mosquito netted window set in the door, and started pulling the door open.

We all screamed and grabbed the door's push-bar handle (which didn't seem to latch properly).  We pulled against the bear and yelled at it, until Teddy the framer grabbed the paw with his hand.

The bear freaked out, turned around, and ran away from the camp.

Back in ANC for R&R, I read in the ADN that the Veco camp hadn't fixed that door, because another bear had opened the same door and wandered around INSIDE the camp, gorging on the food in the open garbage cans in the hallway.
Close Join Our Mail List to Stay Up To Date! Win a FREE Membership!

Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!

You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.


By signing up you agree to our User Agreement. *Must have a registered ARFCOM account to win.
Top Top