Colorado's Waterton Canyon park has bears, and those bears have a problem: hikers wielding selfie sticks.
"We've actually seen people using selfie sticks to try and get as close to the bears as possible, sometimes within 10 feet of wild bears," Brandon Ransom, manager of recreation of Denver Water, the public utility that maintains the park, said in blog post. "The current situation is not conducive for the safety of our visitors or the well-being of the wildlife."
Public access to the park has been shut off since August 28, and the utility has not said when it might reopen. At the time of the closure, two mother bears, which are notoriously protective, were foraging with a pair of cubs in the canyon and a cyclist had just been chased by a bear, according to Denver Water.
But Waterton Canyon isn't the only park that has raised alarms about hikers with overeager photography habits. Last year, the U.S. Forest Service chided visitors of a park around Lake Tahoe for overbearing behavior during salmon spawning season.
"Visitor center staff routinely encounter unsafe situations as guests ignore their instructions and get too close to bears to take photos and videos," the agency said in a statement last October. "If visitors continue to disregard directions to stay away from bears at Taylor Creek, the Forest Service may close the area for public safety."