What if James encountered the bear on the road and he headed into the creek area to give himself a chance. Open road the bear would run him down in no time.
What if his main reason for doing what he did was to escape a bear and the last thing he would have wanted was to bring the bear back to where his family was?
This is from a post on Joe Duck...thought some of you would like to see it.
for those who questioned him leaving the car, I saw this:
Link to full story below.
It is easy to say now that Kim should have stayed with the car. But back in 1995, a salesman named DeWitt Finley was trapped on Bear Camp Road. He got his truck into a snowdrift and realized he wasnt going to get it out. The locals say Finley, a healthy man of 56, probably could have walked out on the road pretty easily.
But Finley was a believer. He was convinced that God would save him. For nine weeks he sat in his truck, meticulously marking off the days and writing in his diary.
In the spring, a couple of teenagers found his body. Hed starved to death in his truck.
Up in the mountains, they still say Finley was foolish for what he did. He could have made other choices, they say, better ones, and he might have saved himself.
In a way, that is true of James Kim. And if it makes you feel better about yourself to criticize him, go ahead. But dont be surprised if no one wants to hear it.
He tried to do the best he could for his family. Trapped, cold and desperate, he had no way of knowing that help was on the way. He didnt know that satellite technology was pinging the sound of their cell phone and that someone was still working on pinpointing the signal. He didnt know that turning off the road would be a dead end.
He pulled on his jacket, kissed his wife and children (does anyone doubt that?), and struck out toward hope. Thats what dads do.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/12/08/MNG75MRTTA1.DTL