How likely is it to see a bear in the Grand Tetons?
Just to keep things in perspective, though, bear encounters are very rare. Consider that roughly 2.5 million people visit the Grand Tetons each year, and roughly one-half of all visitors will venture into the backcountry.
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Possibility of Being Attacked (or Killed) by a BearJust because you may see a bear does not mean that it will attack you. The average amount of bear attacks in Yellowstone is 1 per year. Yellowstone receives over 4 million visitors per year, so the odds of an attack are minuscule.
Teton Park Road (Between Jenny Lake and Signal Mountain)It parallels the base of the Teton Range, meandering its way for 20 miles past lakes and streams, and across sagebrush flats. Wildlife abounds along the entire road, but, in my experience, the best section to see bears is between Jenny Lake and Signal Mountain.
In Grand Teton National Park, most wildlife watchers are in search of mammals. Look for large ungulates like moose, elk, mule deer, bison, and pronghorn from roadside vantage points. Large predatory mammals like grizzly and black bears, wolves and mountain lions are typically more elusive.
In 1999, a wolf pack denned in Grand Teton and produced a litter of pups—the first in the park in over 70 years. Since then, wolves continue to live and reproduce in the Jackson Hole area, including Grand Teton and the John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Meet Grizzly 399399 is the numeric name given to her by researchers with the famed Yellowstone Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team. Territory: Hundreds of square miles in Jackson Hole, including the Grand Teton National Park and Bridger-Teton National Forest.
Grizzly bears are active primarily at dawn, dusk, and night. In spring, they may be seen around Yellowstone Lake, Fishing Bridge, Hayden and Lamar valleys, Swan Lake Flats, and the East Entrance.
Yellowstone and Grand Teton are home to the largest concentration of free-roaming wildlife in the lower 48. This includes one of the largest herds of elk in North America, the largest free-roaming herd of bison in the U.S., and the only significant population of grizzly bears south of Canada.