Bears in your driveway, cougars on the trail, elk on the highway. This is what coexistence actually looks like — and what you need to know before (and after) you move.
If you're moving to a BC mountain town from a major city, this section might be the most important thing you read. Wildlife encounters in places like Revelstoke, Fernie, Golden, and Nelson aren't rare events that make the news — they're Tuesday. A black bear walking down your street in July is about as notable to locals as a raccoon in a Toronto alley.
British Columbia is home to an estimated 120,000–150,000 black bears — roughly one-quarter of all the black bears in Canada. The province also hosts about 15,000 grizzly bears, representing roughly half of Canada's remaining grizzly population. An estimated 4,000–5,000 cougars live in BC, the highest concentration of any province. These aren't populations living in remote wilderness that you'll never encounter. In mountain towns, you are in their habitat. Your house was built in their habitat. Your morning jog is through their habitat.
This isn't meant to frighten you. Thousands of people live safely in these communities year after year. But the key word is "safely" — not "passively." Living with wildlife requires active management, changed habits, and consistent vigilance. The people who get into trouble are almost always the ones who treat bears like large pets, leave garbage out because "it's just one night," or assume that living in town means wildlife won't visit their yard.
The phrase you'll hear constantly in mountain towns is "a fed bear is a dead bear." It sounds dramatic. It isn't. Once a bear has successfully obtained human food — whether from a dumpster, a bird feeder, a fruit tree, or a cooler left on a porch — it will return. It will become bolder. It will eventually do something that requires intervention by Conservation Officers. That intervention frequently ends with the bear being destroyed, because a food-conditioned bear cannot be safely relocated — it will simply seek human food sources at its new location.
Black bears (Ursus americanus) are the wildlife species you will encounter most frequently in virtually every BC mountain town. They're smaller than grizzlies — adult males typically weigh 90–180 kg (200–400 lbs), females 60–100 kg (130–220 lbs) — but still powerful animals that deserve respect.
BC's black bear population is one of the densest in the world. In the Kootenay and Columbia Valley regions that include Revelstoke, Golden, Fernie, and Nelson, bear density estimates range from 20–40 bears per 100 square kilometres of suitable habitat. For context, this means the areas immediately surrounding most mountain towns harbour dozens to hundreds of bears.
The Columbia-Shuswap Regional District, which includes Revelstoke, routinely reports 200–400 bear sightings and conflict reports per summer season. Fernie's numbers are similar relative to its size. These aren't unusual years — this is baseline.
Black bears emerge from hibernation between late March and early May, depending on snowpack and elevation. They're in a state called "walking hibernation" for the first few weeks — groggy, slowly metabolising, and not eating much. By late May, they're fully active and feeding aggressively to regain weight.
Summer feeding follows berry availability. In June and July, bears focus on grasses, dandelions, and early berries. From late July through September, they shift to huckleberries, Saskatoon berries, and other fruit — this is when they're most mobile and most likely to wander through residential areas, especially in years when natural berry crops are poor.
Fall is the critical period. Bears enter "hyperphagia" — a biological drive to consume 15,000–20,000 calories per day to build fat reserves for winter. During hyperphagia (roughly September through November), bears are feeding for up to 20 hours a day and will take enormous risks to access high-calorie food sources. This is when conflict spikes dramatically. A bear in hyperphagia will break into garages, tear apart sheds, rip down bird feeders, and walk through open doors if it smells food.
The short answer: rarely, but not never. Black bear attacks on humans in BC are uncommon — on the order of 1–3 serious incidents per year province-wide, with fatalities occurring roughly once every 2–5 years. The risk is real but statistically very low if you behave appropriately.
The dangerous scenarios are specific: a mother with cubs who feels cornered, a food-conditioned bear that has lost its fear of humans, or — rarest and most dangerous — a predatory black bear, which is typically a thin, quiet male that stalks rather than bluff-charges. Predatory attacks by black bears are extremely rare but they do happen, and they're the one scenario where playing dead is the wrong response (more on that below).
Grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) are present in all the major mountain town corridors — the Columbia Valley (Revelstoke, Golden), the Elk Valley (Fernie, Sparwood), and parts of the West Kootenay (Nelson surrounds, though less commonly). They are substantially larger than black bears: adult males typically weigh 180–360 kg (400–800 lbs) and can reach over 450 kg. Females are smaller, typically 130–200 kg.
BC's approximately 15,000 grizzlies are managed by population units. The province banned the grizzly bear trophy hunt in 2017, which has contributed to stable or growing populations in many units. Key areas around mountain towns:
Grizzlies are less frequently seen in town than black bears, but encounters do happen, especially along river corridors, near railroad tracks (where grain spills attract bears), and on trails in the surrounding backcountry. In Revelstoke, grizzlies are spotted within or on the edge of town limits several times most summers.
The species distinction matters because your response to an encounter should differ. Grizzlies are more likely to be defensive — particularly mothers with cubs — and more dangerous in a surprise encounter. They have a significantly larger personal space requirement and are more likely to charge if they feel threatened at close range.
However, grizzlies are also less likely than black bears to engage in predatory behaviour toward humans. The overwhelming majority of grizzly attacks are defensive — the bear is protecting cubs, a food source, or its personal space. This is why "playing dead" works for grizzly defensive attacks but not for predatory black bear attacks.
This is the section that could save your life — or more likely, save a bear's life by preventing the kind of escalation that leads to a bear being destroyed. Most bear encounters in mountain towns end with the bear walking away. Your job is to not make the situation worse.
First: understand that the majority of bear charges are "bluff charges." The bear runs toward you, then veers off or stops short. This is terrifying but not an attack. Stand your ground during a bluff charge — running will make things worse.
| Scenario | Response | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Grizzly, defensive attack (surprised, protecting cubs/food) | Play dead. Lie face-down, hands behind neck, legs spread to resist being flipped. Stay still until the bear leaves. | Defensive grizzly attacks stop when the bear no longer perceives a threat. Playing dead removes the threat. |
| Black bear, defensive attack | Fight back. Use rocks, sticks, fists — aim for the nose and eyes. Be loud and aggressive. | Black bears rarely press defensive attacks if the "threat" fights back. Playing dead doesn't work as well with black bears. |
| Any bear, predatory attack (stalking, following, approaching silently, attacking at night in a tent) | Fight back with everything you have. This is not a defensive encounter. The bear sees you as food. | Predatory attacks are rare but the most dangerous. Playing dead is fatal in this scenario. Fight aggressively. |
This is the most common encounter scenario in mountain towns — and usually the least dangerous, though still requiring correct behaviour.
BC is home to roughly 4,000–5,000 cougars (Puma concolor), making it one of the highest-density cougar jurisdictions in North America. Unlike bears, which you'll see regularly, cougars are almost never seen — and that's by design. They're ambush predators that avoid detection.
Cougar encounters in mountain towns are less frequent than bear encounters but they do occur, and they require a different mindset. While bear encounters are mostly managed through food and attractant control, cougar safety is about awareness and body language.
Cougars follow their primary prey — deer and, to a lesser extent, elk. Any mountain town with a resident deer population also has resident cougars. This includes virtually every community covered in this guide. Revelstoke, Fernie, Nelson, Golden, Rossland, and Kimberley all have deer that winter in and around town, which means cougars patrol these same areas, especially at dawn and dusk.
Cougar sightings in town tend to spike in late fall and winter when deer move to lower elevations. Young male cougars dispersing from their mother's territory are the most frequent source of urban encounters — they're inexperienced, sometimes hungry, and haven't yet learned to avoid human areas.
Cougar encounters differ fundamentally from bear encounters. With bears, you're usually managing a surprised or food-motivated animal. With cougars, if you're seeing one at close range, it may be assessing you as potential prey. Your response should be assertive:
Cougar attacks on humans in BC are rare but not negligible. The province averages roughly 3–5 reported cougar encounters requiring Conservation Officer response per week during peak season. Actual attacks (physical contact) occur perhaps 1–3 times per year province-wide. Fatalities are extremely rare — about one per decade in BC — but the consequences of an attack are severe.
The Conservation Officer Service destroys approximately 80–100 cougars per year across BC, primarily those that have shown aggressive behaviour toward humans or pets in residential areas.
While bears and cougars get the dramatic headlines, the wildlife most likely to actually injure or kill you in a BC mountain town is an ungulate — specifically, a deer or elk standing in the middle of the highway at dusk.
ICBC (BC's auto insurer) processes approximately 9,000–11,000 animal-related vehicle claims per year. The majority involve deer. The average claim for a deer strike is $5,000–$8,000; moose or elk collisions frequently total vehicles and cause serious injuries or fatalities. A bull elk weighs 350–450 kg — hitting one at highway speed is comparable to hitting a small car.
The highest-risk corridors in mountain town country include:
Several mountain towns have resident or semi-resident elk herds that wander through neighbourhoods, particularly in late fall and winter. Fernie is perhaps the most notable — the town has a well-known urban elk population that grazes on lawns, blocks sidewalks, and occasionally charges people who get too close.
Elk are not gentle animals. A cow elk weighs 225–275 kg and will aggressively defend her calves. Bull elk in the fall rut (September–October) are territorial and unpredictable. Give them a very wide berth — at least 30 metres. Don't try to shoo them out of your yard. Don't walk between a cow and her calf. And absolutely don't try to feed them.
Moose: Less common in the southern BC mountain towns but present in the Revelstoke and Golden areas, particularly in wetlands and along river corridors. Moose are the most dangerous ungulate to hit with a vehicle because of their height — the body comes through the windshield. They're also the most unpredictable on foot. A cow moose with a calf is arguably more dangerous than a bear.
Mountain goats: Present at higher elevations throughout the Columbia and Kootenay ranges. You'll encounter them on hiking trails rather than in town. They're habituated to humans in some areas (particularly near mineral licks) and can be aggressive if approached too closely.
White-tailed and mule deer: The most ubiquitous wildlife in all mountain towns. They're in your garden, on your lawn, eating your tulips. They're also on every road, every highway, and every trail. You will see deer daily. The risk is primarily vehicular.
This is the single most important section of this guide. If every resident of every BC mountain town managed their attractants properly, the majority of human-wildlife conflict would simply not occur. It's not glamorous. It's not exciting. But it's the thing that actually keeps bears alive and communities safe.
Bears have an extraordinary sense of smell — they can detect food from over 3 kilometres away. The list of attractants is longer than most newcomers expect:
Every mountain town has rules about when garbage can be put out and how it must be stored. These rules exist because people ignored the problem for decades and bears died because of it.
If your municipality provides bear-resistant carts (as Revelstoke, Fernie, and several other towns now do), use them correctly. This means:
If your community doesn't provide bear-resistant carts, you'll need a solution: a bear-resistant storage shed, a bear-resistant dumpster enclosure, or at minimum, keeping all garbage in a secure building (not a carport, not a covered deck, not under a tarp). Bears can — and regularly do — open standard garbage bins, tear through tarps, and push open unsecured doors.
This one catches newcomers off guard. That beautiful apple tree in your new backyard? It's a bear magnet. In August and September, fruit trees are one of the leading attractants drawing bears into residential areas. Many bears are destroyed each year because of unsecured fruit trees.
Your options:
WildSafeBC is the province's primary wildlife conflict reduction program, operated by the BC Conservation Foundation. It's one of the best things about living in a BC mountain town — a genuinely effective, community-based program that works.
WildSafeBC places Community Coordinators in participating communities during bear season (roughly May through November). These coordinators are often local residents with wildlife education backgrounds who:
Most BC mountain towns participate. Key communities include:
Bear Smart Community Status: BC's "Bear Smart" program certifies communities that have met specific criteria for wildlife conflict reduction, including having a bear hazard assessment, a bear-human conflict management plan, bear-proof waste management, ongoing education programs, and bear-smart bylaws. Revelstoke has been working toward Bear Smart certification for years and is one of the most advanced communities in the process.
Fruit gleaning programs: Several mountain towns run volunteer fruit-picking programs where community members pick unwanted fruit from residential trees before bears find it. These programs prevent bear deaths and provide free fruit to food banks — a genuine win-win.
Electric fencing loan programs: Some communities loan electric fencing kits to residents with chicken coops, beehives, or gardens that attract bears. Check with your local WildSafeBC coordinator.
If you have pets — particularly dogs — wildlife management adds another layer of complexity. This topic deserves its own full guide, which we've written: Pets and Mountain Living in BC. Here are the critical points:
Off-leash dogs are the leading cause of bear encounters escalating into charges or attacks. The typical scenario: a dog runs ahead on a trail, encounters a bear, harasses it or gets scared, and then runs back to its owner — leading the bear directly to the human. This happens multiple times every summer in mountain town trails.
Outdoor cats in mountain towns are at significant risk from cougars. A domestic cat is well within the prey size range for cougars, and cats are killed by cougars in mountain communities regularly. Most mountain town residents who understand the risk keep cats indoors or in enclosed outdoor spaces ("catios").
Chickens, rabbits, and other small livestock are attractants for both bears and cougars. Electric fencing, solid enclosures, and bringing animals in at night are minimum requirements. See the pets and mountain living guide for detailed recommendations.
Wildlife behaviour in mountain towns follows predictable seasonal cycles. Understanding these patterns helps you anticipate when risks are highest and what to watch for. For a broader look at seasonal life in mountain towns, see our seasonal guide.
Bears emerge from dens between late March and early May, depending on elevation and snowpack. They're hungry but groggy — focused on green-up grasses, dandelions, and any calorie source they can find. This is when garbage that was buried under snow all winter gets exposed, creating immediate conflict opportunities.
Key risks: Mother bears with new cubs (born in the den January–February) are especially protective. Cow moose with calves (May) are extremely aggressive. Deer are giving birth and moving to low-elevation areas.
What to do: Secure garbage well before bears emerge. Clean up any organic waste that accumulated over winter. Remove bird feeders by April 1. Start checking your yard for windfall fruit from the previous fall.
Bears are fully active and feeding heavily. Berry availability determines how much bears wander into residential areas — in a poor berry year (which climate variability is making more common), bears range more widely and conflict increases significantly. July and August are the peak months for bear sightings in most mountain towns.
Key risks: Bears on trails, in campgrounds, and in residential areas following berry corridors. Cow elk with calves through mid-summer. Cougar activity continues but is less visible. Summer outdoor activities put more people in wildlife habitat.
What to do: Carry bear spray on all hikes and bike rides. Make noise on trails. Keep dogs leashed. Pick fruit from your trees as it ripens. Clean BBQs after every use. Don't leave coolers or food unattended outdoors.
This is the highest-conflict period. Bears are in hyperphagia, consuming 15,000–20,000 calories daily to prepare for hibernation. They're feeding up to 20 hours per day and will take risks they'd normally avoid. This is when bears break into garages, enter homes through open doors, and show the least fear of humans.
Key risks: Food-conditioned bears at their most brazen. Elk rut (September–October) makes bull elk aggressive and unpredictable. Deer moving to lower elevations increase road collision risk. Cougar activity increases as deer concentrate at lower elevations.
What to do: Maximum vigilance on attractant management. Don't leave doors open. Harvest all remaining fruit and garden produce. Keep garage doors closed. Be especially cautious driving at dawn and dusk — this is peak vehicle-wildlife collision season.
Most bears are in dens by late November, though some (especially young males or bears that had poor fall feeding) may remain active into December or emerge during warm spells. "Winter bears" — bears that failed to accumulate enough fat for hibernation — are rare but dangerous because they're desperate for calories.
Key risks: Urban deer populations concentrate in town, bringing cougars with them. Moose on winter highways. Late-denning or early-emerging bears in mild winters (becoming more common with climate change).
What to do: Stay alert for cougars, especially at dawn and dusk. Watch for deer and moose on roads. Don't assume that because it's winter, bears aren't around — check with local wildlife reports before assuming safety.
Every mountain town has its own wildlife character. Here's what to expect in the major communities:
Revelstoke is arguably the most bear-dense mountain town in BC. The combination of river valley habitat, proximity to two national parks (Mt. Revelstoke and Glacier), and major berry-producing slopes surrounding the town creates ideal bear habitat. The community reports 200–400 bear encounters per year. Grizzlies are seen in or near town multiple times most summers. The town has one of BC's most proactive WildSafeBC programs and has invested in bear-resistant garbage infrastructure, but the sheer density of bears means encounters are routine.
The CP Rail corridor through town attracts bears due to grain spillage — this is a chronic issue across the mountain west and a significant source of bear mortality (both from attractants and train strikes).
Fernie's wildlife story has two chapters: bears and elk. Black bears are abundant throughout the Elk Valley, and the town's location at the confluence of several drainages creates natural bear travel corridors through residential areas. Grizzlies are present in the surrounding mountains and occasionally appear near town.
The elk situation is Fernie's distinctive challenge. A semi-resident herd winters in and around town, grazing on lawns and blocking sidewalks. Bull elk during rut season are genuinely dangerous and have charged residents. The municipality has tried various management strategies over the years, with mixed success. If you live in Fernie, you will learn to give elk space.
Golden sits between Glacier and Yoho National Parks in the Columbia River valley — prime bear habitat. The town has a significant black bear presence, with regular encounters from spring through fall. Grizzlies are present in the surrounding mountains and occasionally appear in the valley bottom. The major wildlife risk in Golden may actually be highway collisions: the Highway 1 corridor through Rogers Pass and the Kicking Horse Canyon sees frequent deer, moose, and mountain goat activity on the road, especially at night.
Nelson's wildlife situation is moderated by its more urban character (for a mountain town) and Kootenay Lake's influence on local habitat. Black bears are present and encounters are common in summer and fall, but the density is lower than in the Columbia Valley towns. Grizzlies are rare in the immediate Nelson area. The more significant ongoing issue is urban deer — Nelson has a substantial deer population that winters in town, causing garden damage, vehicle collisions, and attracting cougars. The city has explored deer management strategies including urban bow hunting pilot programs.
Rossland's higher elevation and more compact town site means somewhat lower wildlife conflict than the valley-bottom towns, but black bears are regular summer and fall visitors. The extensive trail network that makes Rossland famous for mountain biking also puts riders in bear habitat — carry bear spray on every ride. Deer are common in and around town.
Whistler has one of BC's most visible bear management challenges due to the combination of high bear density and high human density (tourist and resident). The Resort Municipality has invested heavily in bear-resistant infrastructure and enforcement. Whistler's bear population has been extensively studied — individual bears are identified and tracked. The municipality's approach is considered a model for other mountain communities, though the volume of tourists who don't understand bear safety creates ongoing challenges.
The Bow Valley towns operate under a different framework — Parks Canada jurisdiction for Banff and Alberta provincial rules for Canmore. Grizzly bear management is a major focus, with mandatory food storage requirements, trail closures during bear activity, and aggressive enforcement. Canmore has significant cougar and elk issues. Banff's town elk herd is famous (and famously problematic during rut). The penalty framework here is among the strictest in Canada: feeding wildlife in a national park can result in fines up to $25,000.
Wildlife management in BC mountain towns operates under multiple layers of law: federal (national parks), provincial (BC Wildlife Act, Conservation Officer Service), and municipal (local bylaws). Understanding what's required — and what the penalties are — matters.
The BC Wildlife Act makes it illegal to feed dangerous wildlife (bears, cougars, wolves, coyotes) or to intentionally attract dangerous wildlife. "Intentionally" has been interpreted broadly — leaving garbage unsecured knowing that bears are in the area can constitute an offence. Penalties under the Wildlife Act can reach $100,000 for a first offence and $200,000 for subsequent offences, though typical fines for attractant violations are much lower (usually $230–$575 under the ticket system).
The Conservation Officer Service (COS) enforces provincial wildlife laws. Conservation Officers have significant authority — they can issue tickets, seize property, and in serious cases, recommend charges under the Wildlife Act. They're also the ones who respond to wildlife conflicts and, when necessary, destroy problem animals.
Most mountain towns have enacted their own wildlife attractant bylaws, which typically include:
| Requirement | Typical Rule | Typical Fine |
|---|---|---|
| Garbage storage | Must be in bear-resistant container or inside a secure building at all times except morning of collection | $100–$500 |
| Bird feeders | Must be removed or inaccessible April 1 – November 30 | $100–$250 |
| Pet food | Must not be stored or fed outdoors | $100–$250 |
| Compost | Must be in bear-resistant composter; no meat, fish, or grease in outdoor compost | $100–$250 |
| Fruit trees | Must harvest fruit or arrange for harvest; no windfall accumulation | $100–$250 |
| BBQ grease | Grills must be cleaned after use; grease traps managed | $100–$250 |
Enforcement varies significantly between communities. Revelstoke and Whistler are among the most proactive — bylaw officers actively patrol for unsecured garbage during bear season, and fines are issued. Smaller communities may have less consistent enforcement but the provincial rules still apply, and Conservation Officers can and do issue tickets in any jurisdiction.
The trend across BC is toward stricter enforcement. Communities that have invested in education and enforcement have seen measurable reductions in bear conflict and bear mortality. It works — but only if residents comply.
Knowing when and how to report wildlife is part of being a responsible mountain town resident. Here's the framework:
Bear spray is not optional in BC mountain towns. If you hike, bike, run, walk your dog, or do anything in areas adjacent to wildland — which in most mountain towns means stepping out your back door — you should carry bear spray.
Living with wildlife is one of the defining experiences of mountain town life in BC — and it's one that city transplants consistently underestimate, in both its beauty and its demands. You will see bears. You will probably see cougars. You will definitely see deer and elk. And after a while, the novelty wears off and what remains is responsibility.
The good news is that the system works when people participate. Towns with strong WildSafeBC programs, enforced attractant bylaws, and educated residents see dramatically fewer bear deaths, fewer dangerous encounters, and fewer property damage incidents. Revelstoke's long-running Bear Aware program has measurably reduced bear mortality in the community. Fernie's bear-resistant garbage cart program has cut residential bear conflicts. These aren't theoretical solutions — they're proven approaches that work when the community commits to them.
The challenging news is that it requires permanent behaviour change. You don't get to be lazy about garbage — ever. You don't get to leave bird feeders up because "it's just for the winter." You don't get to let your dog run off-leash on bear-dense trails because "he always comes back." These aren't suggestions. In mountain towns, they're the price of admission — and the price of keeping bears alive.
If you're considering a move to a BC mountain town, wildlife coexistence should be part of your decision-making alongside emergency preparedness, cost of living, and healthcare access. It's not a dealbreaker for most people — but it is a lifestyle adjustment that deserves honest consideration.
Carry bear spray. Secure your garbage. Pick your fruit. Learn the difference between a grizzly and a black bear. And welcome to the neighbourhood — you'll be sharing it with some remarkable animals.