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Grizzly bear that attacked Alberta hikers will be left alone to move on

An access road near where the bear attacked in the Waiporous area was closed to public. Sarah Offin / Global News

A grizzly bear that sent a 25-year-old woman to hospital will be given space to move on with her cubs, officials said Wednesday.

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Alberta Fish and Wildlife said the sow was behaving defensively, “reacting naturally to protect her cubs” when she attacked a pair of hikers. The incident happened near the Trapper’s Hill campground in the Waiporous area of southern Alberta Tuesday afternoon.

READ MORE: 2 young grizzly bears relocated to wilderness northwest of Calgary

“The bears will be left alone and given the space they need to move on,” spokesperson Brendan Cox said in an email to Global News. “The area is closed from the gates at Bar C Ranch west along TransAlta road to Banff National Park.”

He said the closure will be lifted when officers feel it is safe.

Watch below: Gary Bobrovitz reports July 19 on a woman recovering in Calgary hospital from a bear attack

STARS Air Ambulance said it transported a 25-year-old female patient in stable condition to Foothills Medical Centre in Calgary after it was dispatched at 12:30 p.m. to the area for a “bear attack-related injury.”

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Witness Coleman Blair said it appeared the bear bit the woman’s arm after knocking her into the Ghost River. While he said Tuesday the couple told him they were sleeping and woke up to find the bear basically on top of them, Fish and Wildlife said the hikers were awake when the cubs stumbled upon them.

“The mother then went in to protect the cubs,” Cox wrote in an email Wednesday.

Officials responded to a report of a bear attack in the Waiporous area July 19, 2016. Global News

 

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