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6‑Pound Pomeranian Chases Black Bear Out of BC Home

Andrew Alpin

On Doggo digest we have often pubished articles on the bravery of small dogs, including titles like “Fearless small dog breeds that could scare away bears” that’s not an exaggeration because these tiny little tykes can be so snappish that larger animals get confused and run. Recently going viral is the video of a small six-pound pomeranian who sprinted at a full-grown black bear and won. The feisty little dog named Scout chased a black bear out of his BC home, and its the the kind of clip that makes you gasp, then grin, because it flips our expectations upside down in a heartbeat. One second a curious bear is poking around a quiet British Columbia home; the next, a tiny orange puffball is storming into frame like a siren on legs. The energy is chaotic, hilarious, and honestly a little inspiring. Watching it once doesn’t feel like enough, because you catch new details each time. And yes—the little hero’s name is Scout, and he acts exactly like the name sounds: alert, loyal, and fearless.

Meet Scout: Big Heart in a Pocket-Size Body

Scout. Source: YouTube

Scout is only six pounds, but he carries himself like he pays the mortgage. Pomeranians are known for their bold personalities, and he delivers the full package—ears up, tail flagged, voice booming for a tiny frame. What stands out is how quickly he goes from napping or lounging to “defend the house” mode, as if he’s been waiting his whole life for this moment. The video makes it clear he isn’t bluffing; he’s pushing forward, not just barking from a safe distance. That confidence is contagious—viewers can feel it and, honestly, crave it a little in their own lives. When a small dog steps up like this, it blurs the line between pet and protector in a way that hits the heart.

The video description says it perfectly, and it’s impossible not to smile at the phrasing.

“Scout may be a small Pomeranian, but he has a big personality, and didn’t hesitate to scare off a much bigger intruder in his home.”

That’s the core of the story: not the size of the dog, but the size of his spirit. It’s also a reminder that personality matters—temperament, alertness, and attachment to home can turn even the smallest companion into a credible deterrent. In Scout’s case, all that spark shows up right when it counts. The result is a viral moment that feels both surreal and strangely practical.

The Moment a Black Bear Walked In

The black bear in the hourse. Source: YouTube/Global

The video opens like a normal home-security clip: calm interior, faint household sounds, everything still. Then a black bear wanders in through an open door as casually as a neighbor dropping by to return a rake, and beelines toward the kitchen. You can almost hear the bear thinking, “Snacks?” as it noses around the dog bowl, because that’s exactly where it ends up. This is British Columbia, where black bears are a fact of life, but seeing one inside a living room is still a shock. The room is quiet, the bear is curious, and there’s no human in the immediate frame to intervene. It has that eerie, slow-burn tension you feel just before something big happens. And then—without warning—the quiet ends.

From down the hall, Scout launches into view, all bark and bounce and blazing confidence. His entrance snaps the scene like a rubber band, and you instantly sense the bear’s mood shift from curious to “I’m leaving.” The little dog’s voice echoes off the walls, making him sound ten times bigger than he is. The bear backs off, then spins toward the door, and the chase is on. It’s startling, funny, and downright thrilling to watch that size mismatch turn into a runaway victory for the underdog. You don’t need slow motion to feel the adrenaline; the clip serves it raw.

Watch the full video on YouTube

What the Video Shows, Frame by Frame

Start with the bear crossing the threshold, head down and sniffing, following a scent trail straight to the kitchen. It pauses at the dog bowl, rustles it, and that sound becomes the trigger—somewhere out of frame, tiny paws hit the floor. Scout appears like a siren: fast, focused, and loud, charging the intruder without a hint of hesitation. The bear freezes, recalculates, and then chooses retreat over testing this fiery unknown. The camera captures the pivot and the retreat down the same path the bear came in, with Scout glued to its heels. It’s not chaos; it’s surprisingly orderly—a clean, decisive eviction.

What’s impressive is how persistent Scout stays once the bear turns tail. He follows to the doorway, still barking, making sure the message lands: this house is taken. The action ends almost as quickly as it began, leaving a living room that’s quiet again, minus the echo of one very proud bark. You can practically feel the human rush that follows—footsteps, hands, and hearts still catching up to what just happened. The replay button suddenly feels like a necessity, not a luxury. Even if you’ve never met Scout, you can tell he’d run it back the exact same way.

Why Small Dogs Can Deter Big Wildlife

Pomeranian
Pomeranian (image credits: pixabay)

It seems counterintuitive, but small dogs often punch above their weight because of three things: early detection, explosive energy, and a voice that cuts through quiet rooms. Bears, like most wildlife, prefer to avoid unpredictable confrontations; a fast-moving, loud animal rushing at them is a “not worth it” signal. Little dogs also live close to the ground and notice tiny sound cues most humans miss—like a food bowl scraping tile—which gives them a head start. Add in a strong territorial streak and you get a fearless first responder who treats every doorway like a front line. That doesn’t mean small dogs are physically imposing; it means they change the psychology of the moment. The surprise and the noise are often enough to flip curiosity into retreat.

Of course, there’s a line between deterrence and danger. A tiny dog doesn’t win a wrestling match with a bear; he wins the timing and the optics, and most bears choose to leave. That’s why owners should treat this kind of bravery as a lucky break, not a repeatable tactic. Still, Scout’s clip shows how a pet’s presence can function as an early-warning system that buys people precious seconds to respond. In the real world, that little head start can make all the difference.

Living Safely with Black Bears in British Columbia

(Photo credit: Openverse)

Moments like this are unforgettable, but they also underline a simple point: prevention matters. In bear country, everyday habits can lower the odds of a close encounter at your doorstep. The basics are practical and boring—and that’s exactly why they work. Keep smells contained, access points shut, and routines tight so curiosity never turns into a kitchen visit. And remember, the goal isn’t to “win” against wildlife; it’s to avoid the matchup entirely. Scout’s bravery is amazing, but planning and prevention are what keep homes calm on ordinary days.

  • Secure food attractants: store pet food indoors in sealed containers and pick up bowls after meals.
  • Lock doors and close ground-floor windows, especially during dawn and dusk when wildlife is most active.
  • Use wildlife-proof garbage and compost practices; put bins out the morning of pickup, not the night before.
  • Remove bird feeders seasonally and clean grills so grease and seed smells don’t act like magnets.
  • Supervise pets outside; don’t encourage chasing, and keep bear spray accessible where legal and appropriate.
  • If a bear enters, prioritize human safety: make noise from a protected spot, give the animal an exit, and contact local authorities if needed.

Scout’s clip will live rent-free in people’s heads for a long time because it feels both outrageous and perfectly Canadian: a tiny dog defending home turf with full gusto, a black bear choosing the wiser path, and a relieved household catching its breath. It’s a story about courage, yes, but also about paying attention to the small habits that keep wildlife wild and homes peaceful. In places like BC, that balance is the real win.

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