Bear mauls Alaska outdoor teacher
This article is more than 7 years oldLeader of backcountry trek in Alaska Panhandle is taken by helicopter to hospital, a few days after grizzly attacked bear hunter along Denali Highway
A man who teaches classes on the outdoors was mauled by a bear during a mountaineering class in the Alaska Panhandle, according to a university spokeswoman.
Forest Wagner, 35, of Fairbanks, was with a group of 12 students on Mt Emmerich near Haines, Alaska, when he was attacked, according to University of Alaska Southeast spokeswoman Kate Bausler. A student hiked down the mountain to get cell reception and call for help.
Wagner was taken to Providence hospital in Anchorage, according to a statement from the university.
His condition was not immediately available, but the university said he was stable.
Wagner had been leading a group of 11 students and two teaching assistants when Wagner was attacked by a bear with cubs, the statement said. No students were hurt.
According to Wagner’s teaching schedule, he was scheduled to come down off of the mountain by Tuesday. He has been co-ordinating and teaching in the outdoor studies program at the university since 2006, according to his biography. He teaches rock and ice climbing, backcountry navigation, glacier travel and mountaineering.
Alaska state troopers got a call from the Haines police department about noon Monday. According to their report they removed Wagner from the mountain by helicopter and met up with a medical helicopter that took him to a hospital.
The bear was sighted again after the mauling, Bausler said. The students in the mountaineering class were taken down from the mountain and were spending the night in Haines with another professor. Haines is about 90 miles north of Juneau and accessible only by air or sea.
Students were scheduled to take a ferry back to Juneau on Tuesday, Bausler said.
Wagner was the second man attacked by a bear in Alaska within days.
Troopers said bear hunter Glenn Bohn, 77, of Wasilla was attacked by a grizzly near Mile 68 of the Denali Highway just after 1.30pm on Friday.
The 135-mile road runs east to west and connects the Richardson and Parks highways east of Denali national park.
Bohn’s hunting partner killed the bear. Bohn was driven by snowmobile to the Denali highway where a medical helicopter flew him to an Anchorage hospital where he was recovering.
Wildlife troopers, employees of the Alaska department of fish and game and friends of Bohn removed the bear from the field on Saturday.
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