A Colorado man knew something was wrong when he heard a commotion in the early morning on July 10 in the Aspen house where he’s staying with his kids.
He said the large black bear, estimated at about 400 pounds (approx. 181 kg), was standing at the refrigerator when he walked in the room. The animal had opened drawers and cabinets and thrown stuff around.
Chernosky was then able to keep the kitchen island between them and then tried to coax the bear into the garage to get it outside.
The plan seemed to work, but Chernosky said the bear got spooked when he hit the garage door opener, and it came back inside the house.
Chernosky went to make sure that it didn’t wander down the stairs to where his 12-year-old twins were sleeping. That’s when he encountered the bear face to face.
“We looked at each other, and he just smacked me in the side of the head and spun me around and got me again on the back,” Chernosky said. “I literally heard it crack on my head. A bear paw is not soft and cushy.”
He was bleeding heavily from cuts to his forehead and neck but was able to scramble away and scream at the bear to leave.
“I just knew if he didn’t leave I was in big trouble,” Chernosky shared. “But fortunately, he was done at that point and just left.”
Officials with Colorado Parks and Wildlife were able to track down the bear and euthanize it. They'll test samples from the bear and the house to make sure they got the right animal.
Officials said it matched the description of a bear that had been seen in the neighborhood for several days. It may have been the same bear that’s been reported raiding trash cans in the area and evading capture for the past couple of years.
This was the first bear attack in Aspen this year, according to the statement. The three bear attacks in the area in 2019 all occurred outdoors.
Chernosky said he feels lucky as he recovers from his wounds, adding that doctors told him the bear’s claws just missed his eye and his carotid artery.