U.S. and World
July 2, 2008
Calm rescuer saves bear attack victim

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - When Alaska endurance cyclist Peter Basinger rode past the mountain bike dumped in the bushes along a Far North Bicentennial Park trail early Sunday morning, the thought of a horrific bear attack never even crossed his mind. He remembers thinking only that someone must have paused to dart into the woods for a bathroom stop.

Then he came upon a person sitting in the middle of the Rover's Run trail.

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A brown bear fishes for salmon navigating Russian River Falls near Cooper Landing, Alaska.
"They just turned around and said, 'Bear,'" Basinger said Monday.

The person in the trail was 15-year-old Petra Davis. Basinger has known her almost forever. He coached her on skiing when she was in Anchorage Junior Nordic.

Now, he did not even recognize her. Her face was unidentifiable in a mask of blood.

Davis motioned behind herself in the direction of the Gasline Corridor near the Hilltop Ski Area.

Basinger doesn't know why, but he thought she was warning that the bear was still nearby. He picked Davis up and ran down the trail toward a stand of cottonwood trees.

"It felt safer to be out of the zone," he said.

Then he started trying to figure out what to do next. He knew he couldn't carry Davis to the staging area for the 24-hour race in which they had both been riding. That was a couple of miles away. He didn't want to go back toward Hilltop because he thought the bear might still be there.

"She handed [a cell phone] to me," Basinger said. "She had it in her hand. I thought, 'Oh, thank God, we have a phone." He tried to dial 911, but the keypad was locked and he couldn't unlock it. Somewhere in wrestling with the phone, he said, he finally realized it was Davis - an accomplished junior rider on the Kaladi-Subway Cycling Team. Basinger asked her to unlock the phone. He put her feet up to help against shock, cradled her head and dialed 911.

He got a recorded message that the phone couldn't connect to the number.

"I had to have her unlock the phone a second time," he said.

When the second call also wouldn't go through, Basinger called old friend Greg Matyas, one of the organizers of the bike race. Matyas was helping to man the aid station on Elmore.

"I told him to 'Call 911, Petra's been mauled by a bear,'" Basinger said.

Basinger and Matyas have ridden the trails in Bicentennial and Hillside parks for a long time. It was easy to explain exactly where he and Davis were:

Come down the Gasline Trail from Hilltop. Go over the big hill. Take the left turn at onto Rover's Run just before Campbell Creek. The attack happened right there, just inside the bushes next to the big opening. We're just beyond, he said.

Matyas and an EMT volunteer took off toward the attack scene, called 911 and gave dispatcher's Davis' cell number.

"911 called me back," Basinger said. "I started trying to explain to them where we were."

It wasn't easy. The park is a maze of unlit dirt trails through the woods. Access to that part of the park is from multiple trailheads. At some point, Basinger realized Anchorage Fire Department personnel were being dispatched to the wrong location. He tried to explain where he was, as dispatchers gave him first-aid advice.

"They were telling me to put pressure on where she was bleeding," Basinger said. "I kept trying to tell them there was blood everywhere, and it was dark."

Another bike racer, Will Ross, rolled up and offered help. Basinger figures he and Davis might have been on the ground for 10 minutes by then.

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