Dead bear in tree no honeymoon for Helen

A dead bear in a tree is no honeymoon for residents of Helen, a Bavarian-themed village tucked away in the Georgia mountains.

Helen is known for lively beerfests, not dead bearfests.

Helen is known for lively beerfests (above), not dead bearfests (below).

Local librarian Deborah Kelley said Monday that the bear, and its accompanying “powerful” stench, has attracted “bunches of people over there right now trying to figure out how to get him down.”

Kelley, who is not trained to identify large omnivores, said it looked to be about a 350-pound black bear caught high up in an oak tree near the library.

She took pictures but said “he was so high up I couldn’t zoom in far enough.” dead-bear

The dead bear has been in the tree, on public property near Unicoi State Park, since last Monday, said Kelley.

City Clerk Kim Smith said the city manager and public works director were thinking of ways to remove the animal corpse from the city-owned tree.

The state Department of Natural resources has been of little help, said Smith.

“When wild animals die in the wild you just let them be,” said Smith.

But that won’t work for Helen, a mountain town known by beer fans for hosting “The World’s Longest Octoberfest.” (It begins next Thurday, BTW.)

Fortunately for those with noses, the state Department of Agriculture dropped by and helped devise a plan to rid the town of its smelly bear problem.

According to Smith, a city worker will dig a large hole under the tree with a backhoe. Then, a city worker will ascend 40 or so feet in a bucket truck to cut the limb holding the beast, dropping the bear into its grave.

Thiry Helens Agree‘ bears are nothing new in the downtown area.

“We’re surrounded by a state and national forest,” said Smith. “The acorns are gone and Dumpster pickings in Helen are good.”

BREAKING NEWS UPDATE: The bear is down! He’s resting in his new final resting place, an impromptu grave beneath the tree, says City Clerk Kim Smith. The tree is OK, just missing a couple of limbs, and the bear was covered with lime, to assist in decomposition, and plenty of dirt, she said.

50 comments Add your comment

Better Idea: Simply dismember the bear with chainsaw

September 19th, 2011
1:36 pm

That way the only limbs you drop in the hole are bear limbs and not risk injury to the tree or city worker. Having watched numerous RoadRunner cartoons, there is always a certain risk that things do not always fall when and where you intend them to fall.

Ghostrider

September 19th, 2011
1:40 pm

@Jaime

You really think thats a good idea…and do you really think thats gonna work…

Paper Mill Operator

September 19th, 2011
1:43 pm

I’d cut the whole tree down and send it to the paper mill. All the work can be done from the ground.

g

September 19th, 2011
1:43 pm

Duh folks! Chainsaw was almost at the solution…..just get on of those “portable holes” from the Roadrunner show and lay it on the ground. Once the bear is pushed out of the tree, drag it to the hole. Once it’s gone, go ahead and take the hole ( reusing it is GREEN folks ) and put it on the steps outside the congress and senate……there, 3 problems dealt with in one swift move…..thank ya, thank ya very much!

Kim

September 19th, 2011
1:44 pm

Just so you all know. The bear is in the hole the hole is covered up. The tree, city worker and bucket truck are all doing well.

atlmom1

September 19th, 2011
1:46 pm

better idea: you are using your carefully studied cartoons from 40 years ago to determine the best way to deal with this? hmmm.

just saying

September 19th, 2011
1:49 pm

or they could just cut the tree down!

cobbphotog

September 19th, 2011
1:53 pm

Maybe they should just put a Bavarian outfit on the Bear so Helen will look at least 5% authentic (taken the Rebel flags down from the businesses might help another 5% too).

DDoSAttack

September 19th, 2011
2:08 pm

@jaime any reason that they cannot rig the bear up to the bucket and use it as a ‘crane’ to carry it to the ground?

MK

September 19th, 2011
2:16 pm

He’s not dead, no, no, probably pining for the fjords…