In 2005, Alex Messenger was mauled and severely injured by a grizzly bear during a wilderness camping trip in the far reaches of northern Canada. Fourteen years later, he revisits and squares up to all he experienced in a new book published this month, "The Twenty-Ninth Day."
Then 17 years old, Messenger joined a guide and four other campers on a monthlong trip planned by YMCA's Camp Menogyn in Grand Marais. The attack occurred in a desolate part of Canada, a bear and a young man coming together in a random place and moment when Messenger hiked alone from camp. In the book, Messenger compares the sudden meeting to a series of dance moves, but there is nothing light about any of that day — the 29th day of the 550-mile trek. During the assault, the bear bit him in the right thigh, coming within a quarter-inch of his femoral artery and leaving him with a serious infection. (Related book review here.)
In a recent conversation, Messenger, a Duluth resident, reflected on the unpredictability of the encounter and its psychological remnants.
His comments were edited for length and clarity.
Did you think you could evade the bear?
I tend to be an optimist. That said, I knew that I was in a really terrible situation as soon as that bear appeared and pretty much with every step from there.
After the first contact, when the bear started coming back, I thought it wasn't just going to say, "Oh well, I guess I'll just leave." That bear had a goal in mind. I saw how fast the bear could change direction. I didn't really think that there was no way out.
Realizing the gravity of the situation, the experience would hit me with such force that I thought "Oh, my god, I just got attacked by a grizzly bear."
Have you contemplated what the universe was thinking that you needed to be there?
That was one of the big questions that I wanted to figure out before I wrote the book.