When we lived in Colfax CA between 1991 and 2019 we
had lots of bear encounters.
One day as I passed by the utility room which had
a door out to the backyard (with pained windows in the upper
portion I noticed this... grabbed my camera to catch this
black bear (which looks like a brown bear but isn't) eating
out of the finch feeder.
Then Mama Black Bear appeared and started talking to
baby... "Hey save some for me"!!!
I was impressed by her agility as she wandered thru the
flower pots and various garden art without touching anything
with her body.
Baby bear had to stand on it's back legs while
Mama bear just stood there and polished off the rest
of the food.
I made sure they cleared the yard and then took my ladder out
of the shed and hung the feeder up higher at the end of the limb...
but that didn't stop they from trying to climb the tree to
get a free meal.
Many mornings as I went outside, I'd find the garbage can overturned.
Anytime we went outside, you had to scan the brush line before
watering the trees
or flowers because you never knew if you'd have a
visitor lurking in the shadows!!!
Well, enough is enough, so we decided to put the garbage can
in the shed and lock the shed door.
but that didn't stop the bear, who just ripped the lock and trim
of the shed and went inside...
Check out this quick video to see the bear in action!!!
When I was telling a hiking friend about our bear problems,
she shared these 2 photos of a young black bear who visited
her home and loved to sit in a wooden bucket full
of rain water. They lived about 45 minutes east of
Colfax, right off of I-80.
Some time later, when I was shopping for garden art,
I couldn't resist these metal paw prints, and used them
along the edge of the sidewalk, the same path the real bear used!!!
Then I spotted this guy giving me the evil eye while we were
touring Three Rivers Petroglyph Park in New Mexico in 2010.
While in Sitka, Don had an encounter with a Black Bear
that was hanging out on the street corner.
I prefer to see them from a little farther away, thru the
zoom lens of my camera!!!
As we left the Anchorage Airport on another tip, Don posed
with this world class 7' tall polar bear.
The polar bear is generally considered the largest bear
species on Earth. A close second is the
brown bear, specifically the Kodiak bear which
is a subspecies of the brown bear native to Alaska.
This giant also had some pretty big teeth... and toe nails.
in June of 2013. we took a fun two hour speed boat tour from
Telegraph Cove on Vancouver Island BC to a Bear sanctuary
called Knight Inlet which is located on the west shore of British Columbia.
It was a nice cloudy day so all types of bears came out to play.
(The tour guide told us it was hot and sunny the day before,
so all the bears were hiding in the shade so they only saw a few!!!)
While touring this remote inlet, we saw 23 bears,
some brown, some black and some grizzlies too.
Between mid-April, black, brown and grizzly bears begin emerging
from hibernation and gather here to feed on the new spring
growth. This area has the largest concentrations of Grizzly
bears in British Columbia. Some black bears are actually black
while others were actually brown. And they were
all over the place with cubs in tow... teaching them
how to roll rocks to find yummy things to eat!!!
We viewed them from a smaller rubber boat that was lowered into the
inlet from our large tour boat. The only limitation was that we
had to stay 25 yards off shore, which is why our "dingy" also had a
guide on board. However, this gave us up close and personal views of multiple
Moms feeding with their twin and triplet cubs in close proximity to
one another. Not a common site to see at all in the bear world!!!
This was my favorite photo of all... twin 2 year old grizzlies.
(See that hump on the back... that's how you tell a brown/black
bear from a grizzly bear.)
Male Grizzly bears weigh between 400-600 lbs; females between
290-440 lbs... Black bear males weigh between 125-500 lbs and females
between 90-300 lbs. Baby bears weight less than 1 lb when they are born.
These twin grizzly bears were about 2 years old and were abandoned
by their mom because it was time for her to start a new family!!!
After reaching age 2 you should have learned all the tricks of the trade!!!
The best time to spot grizzly bears in their natural environment is from
June to Sept. In June the berries are not yet ripe and the bears
seek other food close to the water.
A "bucket list" trip for sure!!!
Back on Vancouver Island, we traveled by car to the north-east end
of the island and were delighted to see that the
"welcome" sign to Port Hardy also featured BEARS.
While staying in a lakeside cabin we were happy to
see a mama bear and her cub fishing in a more traditional way...
while another climbed a tree to get a better view.
THE END