You’ve likely noticed the cooler mornings as summer turns to fall. Bears no doubt have as well, and they are on the move, desperate to pack on fat to get through a foodless winter hibernation. More so, after dry weather conditions impacted natural food availability.

During their fall feeding frenzy, if the food is there, bears will attempt to feed for up to 20 hours on acorns and berries, add two to four pounds of fat, and consume an astonishing 20,000 calories, daily!

Black bears have extraordinary noses – seven times better than the best dog – and are lured near people and homes by trash, bird feeders, domestic fruit, chickens, compost, pet food, and more. Trash is by far the leading attractant. Bears obtain a huge caloric boost from these foods and seek out more, sometimes leading to property damage, damaged fruit trees, vehicle break-ins, or worse.

If bears need to be managed for problematic behavior, options for state wildlife managers are limited and oftentimes things don’t end well for bears. In 2024, La Plata County led all Colorado counties in domestic fruit incidents and bears being relocated, and was second highest in trash incidents, bear sighting reports, and bears being euthanized. Fourteen percent (15) of the 98 bears euthanized, and 25% (17) of the 68 relocations of bears across the state, occurred within La Plata County.

It’s well past time for the cycle of teaching new generations of bears undesirable habits to end. Thankfully there are solutions. Here are some simple measures you can take:

To help, a $100 rebate is being offered to county residents that upgrade to a bear-resistant trash container. Visit bearsmartdurango.org for information. It’s up to all of us to keep people safe and allow bears to thrive in their natural environments. Please do your part for yourself, your neighbors, your community – and for our area bears.

Bryan Peterson is the Executive Director of Bear Smart Durango, a nonprofit that has been working to reduce human-bear conflict for 22 years. For more information on living with bears, visit cpw.state.co.us and bearsmartdurango.org. Resident resources are also available by calling the La Plata County Bear Hotline at 970-247-BEAR.