> "The bear population has quadrupled," said [Ahwahnee Hotel employee Dane] Peterson...
> "It's not like they aren’t usually here," he said of the bears, bobcats and coyotes that he and other employees now see congregating outside their cabins and apartments. "It's that they usually hang back at the edges, or move in the shadows."
Edit: The title used here omits the quotation marks of the article title, making it more misleading.
It was during the colder months. There were three of them on the path. I think it was a female and two adolescents. One of them tried to get closer to me by heading up the back of a hill. I threw a rock at it to deter it, then we turned around and headed back down.
The eyes and the way it moved in the dark were very catlike. I've not seen any bears or coyotes that would move like that.
> "It's not like they aren’t usually here," he said of the bears, bobcats and coyotes that he and other employees now see congregating outside their cabins and apartments. "It's that they usually hang back at the edges, or move in the shadows."
Edit: The title used here omits the quotation marks of the article title, making it more misleading.