TURNER — Matt Dyer could hear the sound of his neck bones breaking under the crushing pressure of the massive jaws of the bear who had pulled him by the head from his tent.
“I can remember thinking, ‘Well, dude, you’re going to die,” he said, his voice raspy from injuries and medical procedures. “This is your time.”
He did not struggle, carried away motionless and helpless, like a kitten in the mouth of its mother.
As he stared at the bear’s belly and huge legs marching away from camp, a light flashed — a flare fired by a member of his hiking party. The bear dropped him and Dyer lay still. The thousand-pound bear didn’t utter a sound, but Dyer could hear its footsteps circle him, then receded.
Dyer is one of the few people in the world who has been attacked by a polar bear and survived — albeit with two cracked vertebrae, a broken jaw, a collapsed lung, injuries to both hands and a gash on the forehead.
He faces a lengthy and painful recovery, though he hopes this week his neck brace will be removed.
Interviewed at his home last week, Dyer said he is lucky to be alive, and able to walk and shake hands and make jokes.
Dyer, 48, of Turner, is a staff attorney for Pine Tree Legal Assistance.
Four years ago, Dyer and his wife, photographer Jeanne Wells, moved from Portland to Turner, near Lewiston, to be closer to nature and so he could have a shorter commute to his office in Lewiston. The home they share is near Androscoggin Riverlands State Park and the Androscoggin River.
Last year, Dyer was flipping through a copy of Sierra Club magazine — he’s a longtime member of the environmental group — and saw an ad for a trip to Torngat Mountains National Park in northern Labrador, billed in the ad as a land of spirits and polar bears. Dyer figured he could afford the $6,000 cost for a once-in-a-lifetime experience. His only other major trip was when he traveled in Europe while in college.
His main concern about the two-week hiking excursion to Labrador was meeting the physical demands of the trip.
He trained, hiking or snowshoeing 10 miles with filled water bottles in his backpack for weight. As he prepared to leave Maine in July, he joked with a colleague that he would be back unless a polar bear gets him.
When he and the other six in the hiking party assembled in Quebec, he was among the fittest.
Torngat Mountains National Park is Canada’s youngest national park, created in 2008, out of an agreement formed with two groups of Inuits, who had occupied the land for many years. The park was formed under the stipulation that only Inuit people could carry firearms there. It is home to an abundance of wildlife, including omnivorous black bears and, during the brief summer months, the strictly meat-eating polar bears.
A dark beauty
Bad weather delayed for several days the group’s foray into the park. Eventually, they were flown in by float plane, crossing desolate mountains of rock and ice and landing in the spectacular Nachvak Fjord.
Like the others, Dyer was stunned. Herds of caribou grazed the tundra and wolves ran in the distance, giving the hikers a wide berth. Minke whales splashed in the deep waters of the fjord. Wildflowers and scrub willows sprung from hardscrabble ground.
There were signs, too, of nature’s darker side. The ground was strewn with bones. The subarctic climate apparently preserves the bones of dead animals, Dyer said. They found bleached wolf skulls, whale bones and caribou. Dyer found the leg of a wolf that still had tissue on it, all that remained of a recent kill.
The park weather changed swiftly. A brisk east wind replaced sun and temperatures in the 60s with rain verging on sleet and temperatures in the 40s.
The group set up camp near the fjord, tents clustered in a space Dyer described as the size of his modest living room. At the edge of a three-foot buffer, they were encircled by the thin wire of an electrified bear fence. The high-voltage device had always been adequate to protect hikers from a bear attack.
“I was never fully on board with the fence anyway,” Dyer said. “It was pretty flimsy looking.” He would have favored having someone sit up all night keeping watch.
Dyer was aware of the threat of polar bears. He had read up on them extensively. He thought if he was lucky, they might see one.
Since it opened, a polar bear has never attacked a human in the park, though some groups hire Inuit bear guards armed with rifles.
Dyer does not believe a guard would have made a difference, unless the guard kept watch all night and didn’t sleep.
That first morning, the group woke to the sight of a polar bear cub, joined soon by its mother, perhaps 100 yards away.
“I thought, ‘Oh, God, this is great,” Dyer said.
The next day, after returning from a hike inland to scout the location for the next campsite, they spotted a male polar bear, much larger than the one the day before.
The bear eyed them and ambled closer, his tongue lolling. The group gathered together and started to make noise as they had been instructed. The bears are less likely to attack a group than one or two people alone, Dyer said..
“He was getting closer … a little too close,” he said. The bear was probably 30 to 50 yards away. One of the trip leaders fired a flare gun and the bear ambled off, climbing onto a ledge where it watched their camp, sometimes dozing.
“We all stayed behind the bear fence,” he said. “I wasn’t freaking out or anything.”
The group had dinner and retreated into their tents before sundown. That far north, the summer sun sets at 11 p.m. and rises at 3 a.m.
It was in the brief twilight between the two that the bear struck on July 24.
‘Bear in the camp!’
Dyer is a light sleeper and was lying awake on his back staring at the ceiling of the tent, which was on the western side of the grouping. He suspects the bear approached from downwind and his was the first tent it came to.
“I’m laying awake. I saw the shadow of these two bear arms coming over the top and I thought, ‘Oh, boy,’” he said. “There was no doubt what it was.
“I shouted ‘Bear in the camp! Bear in the camp!’ I think I got it out twice. He just scooped me up, tent and all.”
Dyer was being lifted by his head, the shroud of the tent still around him. The bear didn’t growl or roar.
“I felt tugging, tugging, then ‘pop’ like opening a beer or a champagne cork,” he said. “It bit my head through the tent and pulled me right out through the fabric.”
The beast’s mouth enveloped the back of his neck. The jaws were so close to his ear he heard his bones breaking.
“I couldn’t see his head. He had me by the back of the neck” and he was moving quickly away from camp. “I didn’t scream. I wasn’t panicking. I was just keeping still, waiting for it to happen.”
“I think if I had been flailing around, he would have killed me.”
As the camp erupted into noisy chaos, the bear whipped him around, maybe to look back.
Then Dyer saw the light from the flare hanging in the sky.
The bear dropped him.
Dyer lay like an animal playing dead.
“I could still hear him, his footsteps. I couldn’t holler because he busted my jaw.”
The bear retreated and members of the group approached Dyer.
Dyer is convinced he would have died if Rick Isenberg hadn’t been there. Isenberg, a research physician from Arizona, got Dyer into a tent and stabilized his broken bones and treated multiple puncture wounds.
It was 1:30 a.m. One of Isenberg’s first tasks, as he worked to treat the back of Dyer’s neck, was to cut through Dyer’s formidable ponytail with the first aid kit’s small pair of scissors.
His ponytail is now lying among the bones on the rugged landscape, Dyer said with a chuckle.
Another in the group tried to raise help on the ship-to-shore radio, but didn’t get a response. Dyer lay for hours in the small tent, the other hikers taking turns sitting with him.
Others kept a nervous watch in case the bear came back.
The bear’s smell and saliva enveloped him.
“It was like slug slime. Then you get the smell, very fishy, oily, and it lingered for a week,” he said.
Despite his injuries, he said he felt good.
“If you ever get dragged out in the dark by a bear and then you’ve been saved, you’re not going to be ungrateful. You’re not going to be complaining.”
Finally, at 6:30 that morning, they reached a Royal Canadian Mounted Police communications center.
The park service dispatched a rescue helicopter, which took an hour to reach them.
Seven hours after the bear attacked him, Dyer was loaded into the helicopter. Isenberg stayed with him. The park service left behind a bear guard armed with a rifle to stay with the other hikers, who waited 12 more hours until a boat arrived to evacuate them.
Dyer remembers flying into the Torngat park base camp, which reminded him of a lumber camp.
Impending bad weather convinced the park service he should be flown to Kangiqsualujjuaq, a small town in northern Quebec and then on to Montreal.
Dyer said he wasn’t in a lot of pain.
At the hospital in northern Quebec, he remembers a flurry of activity. They installed a breathing tube and he was given anesthesia. He was placed in a medically induced coma for the trip.
He woke at Montreal General Hospital, 1,000 miles to the south.
‘I knew it was bad’
Back in Maine, Wells had been working with her photography equipment, shuttling between her house and her adjacent studio, when she saw two missed calls from Canada on her cellphone.
“I knew it was bad. I didn’t want to call back,” she said.
The phone rang, It was Isenberg.
“He said, ‘A polar bear attacked Matt, but he’s OK.’”
She got on the next flight to Montreal, arriving at about the same time as her husband. He was breathing through a tube and his head was strapped to two yellow blocks to keep it immobile. He was covered in wounds.
The doctors started slowly bringing him out of his coma.
When he saw her he burst into tears.
His wife said the bear smell stayed with him for days, filling the room even as he lay in the intensive care unit at Montreal General Hospital.
Dyer had suffered fractures in his first and second cervical vertebrae, though no damage to his spinal column. His jaw was broken and remains painful, though he has graduated from eating only yogurt to other soft foods, such as mashed potatoes and tuna fish. It will take six to nine months to heal. He has dropped 30 pounds in the month since the attack.
He has trouble moving the pinky finger on his right hand because of tendon damage where the bear’s teeth penetrated. The cast was taken off his left hand, as were the metal pins to stabilize it, but it remains wrapped in gauze. The pinky and the thumb were broken.
His carotid artery was partially blocked from where the bear’s tooth nicked it.
“A half inch either way, he would have bled out,” Wells said.
As it is, several doctors were surprised he didn’t suffer a stroke as a result of the arterial wound.
Dyer sports a lightning-bolt shaped scar on his forehead.
For all that, he’s upbeat and able to find the humor amidst the ordeal.
Investigators still don’t know what went wrong.
The bear fence was too mangled to determine whether it had malfunctioned or the bear had just pushed through the pain, intent on its next meal.
Dyer has no plans to bring legal action. He does not blame the park or the Sierra Club.
He also does not blame the bear.
“I’m glad that bear got away and didn’t get shot,” he said. “I’d have felt terrible if that bear got killed because I was there.”
David Hench — 791-6327
dhench@mainetoday.com
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