Lions, tigers and a bear ... oh my!

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Dented corn stalks and four red flags mark the spot where Ron Miller saw a black bear on Friday night. Miller was driving home at 7:30 p.m. when he saw the bear, about one-tenth of a mile east of 415 East Street along the Kentville Road. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt)
Dented corn stalks and four red flags mark the spot where Ron Miller saw a black bear on Friday night. Miller was driving home at 7:30 p.m. when he saw the bear, about one-tenth of a mile east of 415 East Street along the Kentville Road. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt)
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NEPONSET — The black bear that has been playing hide and seek with western Bureau County residents since June 26 has made another appearance. “I was driving down the Kentville at 7:30 (p.m.) last Friday, coming home from the Kewanee Sale Barn,” said Ron Miller. “I saw this large, black figure ahead of me on the left-hand side, standing at the edge of the corn.” It was the wrong shape to be a horse or a cow, but when Miller got to about 50 yards away, he figured out what the figure was. “I thought it was the black bear that had probably been seen at Sheffield, so I slowed on down and stopped,” he said.

On June 26, Sheffield business owner Tim Ries reported sighting a bear on the west edge of Sheffield near the railroad tracks by the junction of Routes 34 and 6. Additional sightings were later reported at the Mautino State Fish and Wildlife Area, southwest of Sheffield, and the landscape waste dumpsite on the west side of Sheffield.

Miller backed up his Jeep until he was about 20 feet away, fully expecting the bear to take off at any minute. Instead, the bear just stood there, for a good two and one-half minutes.

“He stood on his hind legs there just like Smokey the Bear,” he said. “The bear seemed oblivious to the fact that I was there.”

Miller said the bear, about five and one-half feet tall, stood there with his brown nose up in the air, searching for a scent, before dropping down on all four legs and walking into the cornfield.

Miller said the whole thing was quite a thrill.

“I was absolutely not afraid of this bear,” he said. “I was in the Jeep, and he was on his feet, so I could outrun him.”

After the bear disappeared, Miller notified Glen Shaner Jr. and Doug Miles, who both live near the area, about what he’d seen.

“I knew that he and Doug would both like to see that bear, and I wanted them to know he was in the neighborhood,” Miller said.

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