The Black Bear Encounter in Michigan's Hiawatha Forest

viewer discretion is advised The Upper Peninsula of Michigan is an area known for its forested lands and 3 great lakes extending peripherally outwards from Wisconsin. It is a grass-carpeted car-free vacation spot because of several iconic activities that people love to do like hiking and camping. In these forested lands on February 10, 1909, Marquette National Forest Park was established by Forest Services USA in Chippewa County of Michigan. This ideal destination for camping and hiking was spread over 124 square kilometers or almost 31,000 acres initially. Which was merged into Hiawatha National Forest on February 9, 1962, and is currently known by this name. This tourist destination is also home to heavy, ferocious, and wild black bears. Black bears are a much smaller species of Bear compared to grizzlies and larger brown bears, they are also much less dangerous and aggressive, but this doesn’t mean attacks are unheard of. Although the community claimed to take a lot of safety measures and everything was going good, there were no such scary animal encounters since the park was set to open for tourists in 1909, until the day when the safe and sound reputation of Marquette national park was hit upon by a misfortune. ──────────────────────────────── SUPPORT DARK NATURE Dark Nature is viewer-supported — no sponsors, no advertisers. Your support keeps the channel independent and the content honest. → https://buymeacoffee.com/darknature ──────────────────────────────── Merch: https://www.etsy.com/shop/DarkDisaste... Music: CO.AG