We do get a fair few deer & other 'imported animals' causing grief on the roads here in Oz, but luckily we don't get too many bears!! :lecturef_smilie: Roos are bad enough, jumping out onto you, sometimes with little or no warning or chance of avoiding - but at least they don't want to eat us! :gaah:
Still, when I was driving road trains here in the Outback of Oz back a few decades ago now, we were always told not to swerve to avoid any kangaroos; donkeys; horses; cows & bulls (including the big old scrub bulls that could get
really big); or even mobs of camels that'd wander onto the road.... that's what the Bull Bars were for!!

hyea: But the brief went on to say to do whatever we could to safely avoid hitting a water buffalo, cos those things were a lot more solid than anything else on a size for size basis; and instead of making '
a mess on the semi & trailers that you could usually hose off', they'd make '
a mess of the semi that'd mean weeks off the road getting it rebuilt, if it didn't write both it and all the trailers off!!' :shocked: They really did too! Lost a couple of mates that way! :sour:
And it's pretty much the same deal in the Southern & Eastern States, especially in the Mountains, only it's not water buffalo that are the big issue there (not too many of them in those parts!

) it's the wombats!! Even the little cute wombats are a solid mass of muscle & bone that are a lot heavier than they look; while the big wombats are basically just organic Sherman Tanks that'll rip the front suspension & undercarriage out of a car &/or truck if you hit them at any sort of speed!! And just like you'd expect from an organic tank, they even poop
cubes of wombat poo onto the tops of rocks & logs etc to mark their territory! Plus, they're real aggro bugga's when you mess them up a little! :shocked:
Still, I guess it's a good thing that the big & savage older Drop Bears don't often come too near our major roads.... now
THAT'D really make for some major headlines! :yikes: