Current:Home > InvestMexican mother bravely shields son as bear leaps on picnic table, devours tacos, enchiladas -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Mexican mother bravely shields son as bear leaps on picnic table, devours tacos, enchiladas
View
Date:2025-04-16 01:34:07
MEXICO CITY (AP) — A Mexican mother bravely shielded her son after a bear leapt on a picnic table and devoured the tacos and enchiladas meant for the boy’s birthday dinner, inches from his face.
Silvia Macías of Mexico City had traveled to the Chipinque Park on the outskirts of the northern city of Monterrey to celebrate the 15th birthday of her son, Santiago, who has Down syndrome.
Soon after they sat down to eat the food they had brought, the bear showed up and gulped down french fries, enchiladas, tacos and salsa. A video shot by her friend, Angela Chapa, shows Macías sitting stoically, inches from the bear’s mouth, holding Santiago and shielding his eyes with her hand. She kept her eyes downcast, to avoid anything the bear might consider a challenge.
“The worst thing was that Santiago might get scared,” Macías recalled Tuesday in an interview with The Associated Press. “Santiago is very afraid of animals, a cat or a dog, any animal scares him a lot.”
“That’s why I covered his eyes, because I didn’t want him to see it and scream or run. I was afraid that if he got scared or screamed or scared the bear, that the bear would react,” she said of the incident Monday.
Macías said that she and Chapa had previously thought about the possibility of a bear encounter — they are not unknown in the park, though usually the bears come out more toward dawn or dusk, not midday — and they had come up with a plan.
“We are going to play a game where we cover Santiago’s eyes and we are going to act like statues,” she recalled rehearsing the plan.
And that is exactly what they did: Santiago remained motionless, even though “the bear was very close to us, we heard him as he growled, as he ate, you could smell the bear. It was really very very close.”
Asked if he had been scared, Santiago, who attends middle school in Mexico City, said “yes, a lot.”
Their resourceful friend Angela, who filmed the scene, lives in Monterrey and knew the proper behavior for a black bear encounter: never run.
She noticed a plate of enchiladas the bear had not eaten — the bear appeared to prefer french fries, and as a true Mexican, had eaten the salsa — and she tossed the enchilada far away, after showing it to the animal. As expected, the animal followed the food and Angela stood in front of the bear, shielding Macías and her son and allowing them to retreat quietly and slowly.
Eventually, the bear went away.
Santiago got his birthday tacos replaced, and all ended well.
Macías says she doesn’t consider herself a hero.
“I just think I’m a mother who protected her cub,” she said.
veryGood! (53)
Related
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- March Madness bubble watch: Could St. John's really make the NCAA men's tournament?
- Camila Cabello opens up about reconciling with ex-boyfriend Shawn Mendes: 'It was a fun moment'
- Maryland revenue estimates drop about $255M in two fiscal years
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Tennessee lawmakers advance bill to undo Memphis’ traffic stop reforms after Tyre Nichols death
- Jake Paul will fight Mike Tyson at 80,000-seat AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys
- Three men arrested at Singapore Eras Tour accused of distracting security to sneak fans in
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Trump ordered to pay legal fees after failed lawsuit over ‘shocking and scandalous’ Steele dossier
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Why Oscars Host Jimmy Kimmel Thinks Jo Koy Should Get a Golden Globes Do-Over
- Woman whose husband killed his 5-year-old daughter granted parole for perjury
- Cryptocurrency fraud is now the riskiest scam for consumers, according to BBB
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Nevada GOP governor stands by Trump amid legal battles, distances himself from GOP ‘fake electors’
- Lawsuit filed against MIT accuses the university of allowing antisemitism on campus
- Explosions, controlled burn in East Palestine train derailment were unnecessary, NTSB official head says
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Jake Paul will fight Mike Tyson at 80,000-seat AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys
MLB's best teams keep getting bounced early in October. Why is World Series so elusive?
Baldwin touts buy-American legislation in first Senate re-election campaign TV ad
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
What to know about Kate Cox: Biden State of the Union guest to spotlight abortion bans
Apple releases iOS 17.4 update for iPhone: New emoji, other top features
'The shooter didn't snap': Prosecutors say Michigan dad could have prevented mass killing