Automotive

Bears Open Unlocked Car Doors, Eat 49 Bars of Chocolate


Screenshot: WLOS (Facebook)

As if anybody needed the reminder with the ring of Subaru-sabotaging bears in this country, bearscan open unlocked car doors. These bears happened to find an unlocked car with dozens of chocolate bars inside, and went on a candy binge worse than any of us do after a stormy Halloween with no trick-or-treaters.

This is, again, one of the many reasons why you should lock your car doors, with other reasons being that humans can also open unlocked doors. Humans, unlike most bears, also know how to drive off with the car.

Asheville, North Carolina news station WLOS reports that Lilly Thurmond was sitting at home on Sunday when she saw a bear and three cubs in her driveway. Bears are common where she lives, the station reported, so she didn’t pay much attention—until she saw a door to her Toyota Prius open and heard growling.

Thurmond, 16, didn’t take long to realize that she had a box of chocolate bars that she was selling for a high-school fundraiser in the backseat—you know, those really good ones that only cost a dollar and are so skinny, you barely feel guilty for eating four in a row. Yeah, those.

The bears certainly didn’t feel any guilt, with WLOS reporting that they ate 49 of the chocolate bars before leaving the trashed car behind. Thurmond recorded the candy binge from inside of her house, in a video that smoothly transitions from her thoroughly freaking out to casually accepting her reality:

WLOS reports that Thurmond’s mother, Kim Peck, said the insurance will cover the punctures the bears made to the seats, but didn’t mention who owes on the chocolate tab. From the story:

One of the bears, she said, got into the front passenger seat and got stuck for a moment, unable to wedge itself out.

“So, her car was not locked,” Thurmond’s mother Kim Peck said.

Peck said she wasn’t mad at her daughter for leaving the candy in the car, just thankful Thurmond was in the house when the bears arrived and helped themselves to the chocolate. Wrappers from the candy bars are pretty much all that was left of the chocolate after the bears somehow managed to open the wrappers and eat the candy. […]

“I think I had probably sold like 10 before they got hold of it,” she said.

That left about 50. Thurmond found one dark chocolate bar untouched in the car.

Peck told WLOS that she thinks they all learned a lesson with this one, which is to “keep your doors locked because bears know how to open them up.”

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That’s what we keep trying to tell y’all. You’re not safe just because you’re not driving a Subaru. Bears have their favorite cars, but, like all of us, their need to eat junk food outweighs that inclination every once in while.

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