Find Bearylicious Specials at Local Businesses Near You!

It is now surely spring. The tulip fields have come and gone. Hummingbirds buzz about. Campgrounds will soon open their gates to hoards of visitors. And, you guessed it! Bears are emerging from their winter dens to seek berries and roots and to quench their months of hunger.

What a great time to officially designate as Bear Awareness Week!

In an effort to reach a wider audience of people with a bear-safety message, we are asking local businesses to participate in Bear Awareness Week by choosing a bear-themed special and featuring it during the week of May 16th through 22nd. We then provide the businesses with brochures and posters in order to help them spread bear-safety tips.

Check out some creative ideas these supporting businesses will be featuring during the week:

Photo: David Robson/Robson Barista

Annie’s Pizza, Concrete: Baby Bear, Mama Bear and Grizzly Bear sizes on all their pizzas for the week
The Black Drop Coffee House, Bellingham: A HoneyBear Latte
Nimbus Restaurant, Bellingham: A Huckle’beary’ Martini
Birdsview Brewery, Birdsview: A Grizzly Ale

Are you a business owner? Would you like to support Bear Awareness Week by featuring a fun bear-themed special at your business? If so, please contact Rose Oliver to request bear-safety brochures and/or posters. In return we will gladly promote your business.

Governor Gregoire Declares May 16-22 “Bear Awareness Week”

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 13, 2010

Contact:  Sharon Negri, Co-Director, Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP), snegri@igc.org, (206) 799-7372 or (206) 780-9718
Contact:  Matt Fikejs, Media Liaison, GBOP, easmef@msn.com, (206) 914-4382
Note: Photos available (grizzly bear and black bear images)

Governor Gregoire declares May 16-22 “Bear Awareness Week”
Special resources celebrate state’s grizzly and black bears and educate the public on how to co-exist

Black bears and grizzlies are an important part of our state’s natural heritage.  Today, Washington has one of the healthiest black bear populations in the U.S.  It is also one of just five states in the lower 48 still wild enough for a small number of grizzly bears.

Recognizing the value of bears and the need to educate the public on how to live and recreate safely with them, Governor Christine Gregoire recently declared May 16-22 “Bear Awareness Week.”  Among other points, the Governor’s proclamation notes, “Whereas, by educating the public on the ecology, behavior, and conservation of bears, it is possible for people and bears to coexist peacefully…”  (Go to http://www.bearinfo.org/bear-awareness-week to read the full proclamation.)

“During Bear Awareness Week, we want to remind people there are many simple steps they can take to keep bears in the woods and mountains and out of harm’s way.  For example, hanging bird feeders high, storing garbage where bears can’t get at it, and putting it out as close to pick-up time as possible are all effective steps,” notes Sharon Negri, Co-Director of the Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP), the organization at the center of Bear Awareness Week.

To engage the public in learning more about their ursine neighbors, GBOP launched a number of resources today at http://www.bearinfo.org/bear-awareness-week:

  • Special events section to learn about events like Woodland Park Zoo’s “Bear Affair & Big Howl for Wolves”
  • Resources section to explore more about bears and bear safety, including GBOP’s beautiful new booklet “Living with Bears in Washington State”

Although there are some 20,000 black bears in Washington, less than 40 grizzly bears remain in the North Cascades and Selkirk Mountains.  Biologists believe there may be as few as 10 individual grizzly bears in the Cascades, a ten-thousand square mile ecosystem that was designated as a grizzly bear recovery zone by the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee in 1991.

Negri and the GBOP team of local outreach staff work across the North Cascades to bring information about grizzly and black bears to people, especially those who live in and visit bear country.  Chris Morgan, bear biologist and GBOP Co-Director says, “We were thrilled when the Governor agreed to establish Bear Awareness Week.  GBOP is all about distributing accurate, helpful facts about bears as broadly as possible, and this definitely helps.”

A sampling of Bear Awareness Week facts from the GBOP website:

  • Black bears have good eyesight (comparable to humans) and very good hearing.  Plus, their sense of smell is unparalleled – seven times greater than a dog.
  • Black bears are not always black.  They can be brown, cinnamon, blond, white (e.g., the Kermode or Spirit bear), and even a bluish-gray (e.g., the Glacier bear).
  • Grizzly bears usually have 1 to 4 cubs (average of 2), which are born in the den in late January.  At birth, their eyes are closed, they have very little hair, and they weigh less than a pound.
  • Because grizzly bears live off stored fat for up to 6 months of the year while denning, they need to eat large quantities during the time they forage.  An adult male may consume the caloric equivalent of 10 huckleberry pies per day during the height of the berry season.
  • The oldest wild grizzly bear ever captured in North America was a female in the Cabinet Mountains of Montana, and she was 34 years old.

The Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP) is a non-advocacy, science-based organization funded from multiple sources, including state and federal agencies and non-governmental organizations.  GBOP provides a community-based approach to bear awareness and safety that involves homeowners, businesses, and local officials.  Experience has shown that when community members understand bear behavior and ecology, they are willing to take steps to become better neighbors to wildlife and reduce encounters.  Learn more at www.bearinfo.org.

Smarter (or luckier) than the average bear

Smarter (or luckier) than the average bear

By Star Tribune — Mar 30, 2010 

  

    

 

 

 

 

 

(Ken Soring, now a DNR enforcement manager, helped officials work on the bear last week — the first time he has seen her since 1981. Soring watched as DNR researcher Karen Noyce used an electronic device to measure the bear’s body fat. Noyce also attached bright yellow and orange ear tags to the bear and a yellow tag to her collar in hopes that hunters won’t shoot her). 

 

A northern Minnesota black bear has survived for an amazing 36 years, making her one of the oldest on record.

Star Tribune

Last update: March 30, 2010 – 11:31 PM

The bear is simply called No. 56, but “Lucky” might be a better name.

The northern Minnesota black bear has beaten long odds, living to a ripe old age of 36 — one of the oldest — if not the oldest, wild black bears on record.

She was first caught and outfitted with a radio collar in 1981, when she was 7. Since then, she’s survived 29 hunting seasons and avoided cars on highways and clashes with rural residents.

How rare is she?

The average age of a bear killed by a hunter in Minnesota is 3.7 years old. About 80 percent of her 26 cubs died by age 6. And the oldest bear ever killed here by a hunter was 31, based on 35 years of data using teeth to determine the age of harvested bears.

“Obviously she’s really a special bear,” said Department of Natural Resources research biologist Karen Noyce of Grand Rapids, who has been monitoring No. 56 since she first tranquilized and attached a radio collar to the bear back in 1981.

Of the hundreds of bears that have been radio collared since then, the longest that any survived was 23 years, Noyce said.

“Very few bears live past 25,” said Dave Garshelis, DNR bear research scientist. “This is really old for a wild bear. She has found a way to beat the odds.”

Cautious by nature

But Noyce and Garshelis say there’s probably a reason, beyond chance or luck, for her longevity.

“It has to be something behavioral,” Garshelis said. “She has avoided going to hunters’ baits, though there are hunters where she lives. Whether she learned early in life from her mother … we just don’t know.”

Said Noyce: “Some of that might be her personality; she might have a somewhat more cautious nature than other bears.”

People assume a bear is a bear, but Noyce said studies of many animals are showing that they can be quite different. Bears don’t all act the same. A bold or reckless one might not last long.

No. 56 — called that because of the numbered tag she was given — lives in a remote area without a lot of permanent human residences. But there are roads, trails and access by hunters, who typically place bait in the woods to attract bears each fall.

But for whatever reason, she has ignored them.

And she’s apparently passed on that sense of caution to her offspring.

Noyce said No. 56 had at least 26 cubs. All but three survived the first year and one-third survived to age 4.

“That’s a little better than average,” Noyce said.

One of her cubs lived 16 years; another is still alive at 15. At least five of her cubs bore another 47 “grandchildren,” and one of those lived 22 years and bore 28 great-grandchildren. Researchers only tracked the female cubs, so that doesn’t account for reproduction from male descendents. The bear was 26 years old when she had her last litter of cubs.

She also could have encountered trouble during her summer wanderings. It’s not uncommon for bears to leave their home range and travel in mid-summer in search of food, and No. 56 did quite a bit of traveling in the 10 years her movement was closely monitored. Her home range covers about 15 square miles, but one year she traveled 45 miles away and another year she covered 20 miles.

Researchers have visited No. 56 in person every three years, when Noyce replaces the radio collar with a new one. Noyce, Garshelis and Ken Soring, a former DNR researcher and now DNR enforcement manager who helped collar the bear in 1981, recently went into the woods to find the old gal.

Wanted: A natural death

They tranquilized her while she was hibernating in her den, checked her health and attached a new radio collar.

“She’s healthy,” said Noyce. She weighs about 190 pounds. Her face and paws are gray with age. And her teeth are worn, chipped or missing. And that could affect her chances of survival.

“If she has trouble eating natural foods, she may be more attracted to some other food source,” Garshelis said. Like a bait pile.

   

Well-worn teeth                                                              

DNR

 

Turning Gray 

DNR

NPR-KUOW joins GBOP in the field

Steve Scher from NPR-KUOW and Chris Morgan from GBOP in the field (Image: Chris Morgan)

Earlier this month Steve Scher, host of the popular NPR-KUOW radio show ‘Weekday’ joined me in the field to talk bears. Steve was piecing together a story about the bears of Washington and wanted an opportunity to learn about some of the work GBOP and our partners do on the ground. We met at Tradition Lake near Issaquah and within minutes I was able to show him some fresh bear sign! A beautiful example of a tree stump destroyed by a black bear that was searching for grubs. This forest is a great example of the quality habitat that can be found on the outskirts of a sizeable town like Issaquah, and where conflicts between bears and people can occur. These conflicts usually revolve around non-natural food attractants. A bear in a backyard is just like a dog begging at the dinner table – one reward and he’ll be back for more. The trouble is, once a bear is “food-conditioned” by tasting high-calorie foods like garbage, sunflower seeds, and compost, it is a hard habit to break. As we scoured the forest for bear clues I shared some of these thoughts with Steve who enthusiastically recorded them for his show.

Steve (right) interviews Rich Beausoleil from WDFW, and his Karelian bear dog 'Cash'. (Image: Chris Morgan)

I was excited about Steve’s approach as he was really trying to assess the future of grizzly bears and other large carnivores in Washington State. With fewer than 20 grizzly bears in the North Cascades, their future does not look bright without human intervention (an augmentation of bears from another area would be needed). In contrast, in 2008 wolves made a natural return to the Cascades for the first time in 80 years, and given half a chance, their numbers will increase along with their range. Black bears are doing pretty well in the forested ecosystems of Washington – estimates suggest there are around 20,000 in our state.

Steve checks out a grizzly bear track cast (Image: Chris Morgan)

What’s good for black bears is good for grizzly bears too, and with that in mind GBOP is always thinking about pragmatic ways for humans and bears to coexist. One of the programs we love is the work of Rich Beausoleil and Bruce Richards, both of whom are carnivore biologists with Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. They are on the frontline of working with bears and people to ensure safety and understanding – for both species! They use Karelian bear dogs to help keep black bears (and cougars) from getting into trouble near human property. This incredible approach to wildlife management is quite something to witness so I introduced Steve to Rich and Bruce that same afternoon. He recorded the sound of a bear being released from a culvert trap with the specially trained Karelian bear dogs in hot pursuit. The recording on the radio sounds pretty dramatic to say the least, but it is all in the bear’s best interest. Instead of capturing a bear at the location where it has gotten into trouble and translocating it (only to find it later return) the new approach (made possible by the use of these dogs) is to release the bear actually right there – in the very place it is finding itself in trouble. Once the culvert trap door opens, the bear bolts out, and the crazy commotion of noise and dogs ensures that the bear will not be back for more! “Tough love” as Rich says. But it works. Steve got a real kick out of meeting Cash and Mishka, the two dogs owned by Rich and Bruce. They are among the best wildlife ambassadors out there.

Next stop was an interview with Cathy Macchio, an incredible lady who has taken it upon herself to arm her neighborhood in the Issaquah Highlands with all the information needed to live peacefully in bear habitat. She has worked tirelessly to help bears and people and we are honored to now welcome Cathy to the GBOP team.

On Monday, Steve invited Rich, Scott Fitkin (US Forest Service wildlife biologist) and myself back to the studio for a live show about bears, cougars and wolves. The show became a great overview of Washington’s carnivore heritage. You can hear the podcast here: http://www.kuow.org/program.php?id=20076

Our thanks to Steve Scher and everyone at NPR-KUOW for supporting our work by helping to spread the word!

Chris Morgan

Co-Director, GBOP

Governor Gregoire has officially established Bear Awareness Week in Washington

Great news! For the third consecutive year, Governor Gregiore has officially established Bear Awareness Week in Washington thanks to the work of GBOP. This year, the week to remember is May 16th – 22nd. Watch this space for special events that will be happening during Bear Awareness Week. Many thanks to Governor Gregoire for her help in spreading the word about the importance of understanding bears!. To see the signed Proclamation

Early Spring Means Early Signs of Bear

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 22, 2010

Contact:  Chris Morgan, Co-Director, Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP), chrismorgan@insightwildlife.com, (360) 303-4521
Contact:  Dennis Ryan, Field Coordinator – Okanogan County, GBOP, dennisryan@bearinfo.org, (206) 713-2074
Note:  Photos available (grizzly bear, black bear, and/or “non-natural bear food” images)

Early spring means early signs of bear

Here’s how to get “bear smart”

This year, Washington state residents are seeing signs of an early spring: blooming crocuses and daffodils, flocks of robins heading north, and longer and sunnier days.  Residents are also seeing earlier signs of bears as some are already emerging from hibernation due to the warmer temperatures.

Both black bears and grizzly bears are waking up from their long winter slumber and will be heading out of their dens in search of food.  To keep bears wild and families safe, there are a few things people should know.

First, Washington is home to two species of bear: the grizzly bear and the black bear.  While black bears are common, grizzly bears are exceptionally rare.  Around 25,000 black bears can be found throughout Washington’s wooded areas, including rainforests, dry eastern-slope woodlands, neighborhood greenbelts, and pretty much anywhere they can find forested cover.  Grizzly bears, on the other hand, are found only in two areas in Washington: the North Cascades and the Selkirk Ecosystems.  In the North Cascades, it is thought that fewer than 20 grizzly bears remain.

“A bear’s diet is made up of mostly wild plants and seeds.  However, bears can start looking for food in all the wrong places, including porches, sheds, garages, garbage cans, barbecues, kennels, and bird feeders,” said Chris Morgan, bear ecologist and Co-Director of the Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP).  “It really is down to humans to help reduce encounters by being good neighbors.”

Morgan continues, “Bears have an excellent sense of smell.  It’s much better than that of a dog, and they have a great memory when it comes to food.”  Rich Beausoleil, bear and cougar specialist for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, says we can safely co-exist with these animals and offers some tips:

  • eliminate potential sources of easy food
  • keep pet food indoors
  • only feed bird seed in winter (when bears are less active)
  • keep garbage indoors until just before the pick-up service arrives
  • clean barbeque grills after they are used

Even putting biodiesel in bear-safe containers is a wise call, says Beausoleil.

“Remember: A fed bear is a dead bear,” says Chris Morgan.  “Bears that become food-conditioned become nuisances.  We can keep bears wild and avoid encounters by taking a few simple steps.  And, if you should encounter a bear, there are some important things to do to keep safe.”  See the attached recommendations (“Being Bear Smart in Bear Country”) on staying safe while living, working, and recreating in bear country.  You can also visit GBOP’s website at www.bearinfo.org.

The Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP) is a non-advocacy, science-based organization funded from multiple sources, including state and federal agencies and non-governmental organizations.  GBOP provides a community-based approach that involves homeowners, businesses, and local officials.  Experience has shown that when community members understand bear behavior and ecology, they are willing to take steps to become better neighbors to wildlife and reduce encounters.

Being Bear Smart in Bear Country

At your home or ranch

  • Do not leave human food outside where bears can find it.
  • Store garbage indoors or in bear-resistant garbage cans and do not put garbage out until shortly before the pick-up service arrives.
  • Keep barbecue grills clean and free from grease.  Store them inside, if possible.
  • Make sure that bird feeders, birdseed, suet, and hummingbird mixes are not accessible to a bear.
  • Keep pets inside at night, if possible.
  • Remember: If bears have gotten into your garbage or livestock feed, remove the attractant immediately.  Repeated use of a site by bears is much harder to stop than a single instance.

At your campsite

Camp setup

  • First: Be aware of your surroundings.  Look at them from a bear’s perspective.  Investigate your site before setting up camp, and then establish a clean camp that is free from odors.
  • Avoid camping next to trails or streams as bears and other wildlife use these as travel routes.
  • Avoid camping near natural bear food sources such as berries.
  • The 100-yard rule: When not camping in a National Park or other areas with designated camping sites, locate your cook area and food cache at least 100 yards downwind from your tent.

Food storage

  • Never leave food unattended in your campsite unless it is properly stored.
  • Do not bring food or odorous non-food items into your tent.  This includes chocolate, candy, wrappers, toothpaste, perfume, deodorant, feminine hygiene products, insect repellent, and lip balm.
  • Avoid canned foods with strong odors such as tuna.
  • Place food in bear-resistant storage containers (available at some campgrounds) or store it in your vehicle.
  • Where this is not possible, cache your food by placing it inside several layers of sealed plastic bags (to reduce odor) and a stuff sack (waterproof “dry bags” work well).  Then hang it as described below.
  • Remember to hang pots, utensils, cosmetics, used feminine hygiene products, toiletries, and any other odorous items with your food and garbage.

Cooking

  • Never cook or eat in your tent.  Food smells may attract bears and other wildlife.
  • Wash all dishes and cans immediately after eating.  Remember the 100-yard rule: When not camping in a National Park or other areas with designated camping sites, wash the dishes and dump the dishwater at least 100 yards from your campsite.
  • If possible, remove the clothing you wore while cooking before going to sleep.  Store these clothes in your vehicle or with your food and garbage (see above).

Garbage disposal/storage

  • Never leave garbage unattended, unless it is properly stored.
  • Do not bury your garbage.  Animals will easily dig it up.
  • Garbage should be deposited in bear-resistant garbage cans or stored in your vehicle until it can be dumped.
  • Remember: “Pack it in, pack it out.”  This includes ALL garbage (including biodegradable items such as fruit peels).

Hiking and horse packing

  • Think ahead and be prepared.  It is possible to avoid a bear confrontation by being knowledgeable and alert.
  • Travel in a group and during daylight hours.
  • Talk or sing songs as you walk, especially in dense brush where visibility is limited, near running water, or when the wind is in your face.  Bears may feel threatened if surprised.  Your voice will help a bear to identify you as human.  If a bear hears you coming, it will usually avoid you.
  • Keep dogs on a leash and under control.  Dogs may fight with bears and lead them back to you.
  • Never approach or feed a bear or any other wildlife.
  • Consider carrying pepper spray as a bear deterrent.  It may help in an encounter with a potentially aggressive bear.

Hunting and fishing

  • Follow the guidelines for campers, hikers, and horse packers.  Be alert at all times.
  • If you kill a game animal, immediately field dress the animal and move the carcass at least 100 yards from the gut pile.
  • If you must leave the carcass, hang it (in pieces if necessary) at least 15 feet from the ground.  Leave the carcass where you can see it from a distance.  When you return to the carcass, observe it with binoculars from a distance and make noise as you approach.
  • If a bear has claimed the carcass, leave the area immediately and report the incident to the proper authorities.
  • Don’t leave fish entrails on shorelines of lakes and streams.  Sink entrails deep in water.

Encountering a bear

Bear attacks on humans are extremely rare.  To help avoid one, know what to do if you encounter a bear.  Here are tips on how to react if you see one:

  • Give the bear a way to escape.
  • Steer clear of bear cubs.
  • Stay calm and do not run or make sudden movements.
  • Back away slowly as you face the bear.
  • Consider talking to it in a firm tone of voice to let it know you are a human.
  • Avoid direct eye contact with the bear.
  • If you are attacked, fight back using rocks, sticks, and hands to fend off the bear and shout/make noise.

USFS scans backwoods for grizzlies

This is an article by K.C. Mehaffey  published April 14, 2010 in the Wanatchee World

WENATCHEE — Scientists this summer will launch the first large-scale effort to find evidence of grizzly bears in the North Cascades, setting out 75 to 100 hair snags and a few dozen remote cameras.

“We think there’s a few bears wandering around out there, but it’s probably very few,” said Bill Gaines, wildlife biologist for the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. “Certainly we have indications the bears are just north of the Canadian border, and likely would wander back and forth,” he said.

Some attempts were made to document grizzly bears in the mid-1990s, he said, and scientists have used remote cameras to follow up on reported sightings. “In terms of a broad-scale effort, this will be a first,” he said.

Read the entire article

Trafficking in bear gall bladders draws fines and jail sentence

WDFW NEWS RELEASE
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife

OLYMPIA – Investigations by Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) detectives into illegal trafficking in bear gall bladders have resulted in hefty fines for two eastern Washington men and a year-long jail sentence for one of them.

William A. Page, 63, a Curlew meat cutter, was sentenced Dec. 18 in Ferry County Superior Court to a year in jail plus $3,000 in fines after being convicted a month earlier of six counts of unlawful trafficking in wildlife.

Page, of 49 Bjork Ranch Rd. in Curlew, also forfeited $1,600 he paid to undercover WDFW officers for the gall bladders.

Mike Cenci, WDFW deputy chief of enforcement, said Page admitted to buying 35 gall bladders in 2007 and 2008, including 17 he purchased from undercover officers during the course of the department’s investigation.

Some people believe bear gall bladders have healing powers, Cenci said. He noted that black market prices for galls can range between $100 to thousands of dollars, depending on whether the sales take place locally or overseas.

“Buying or selling bear gall bladders is a crime in this state, because it creates an increased demand for wildlife and their body parts,” Cenci said. “That can threaten the long-term sustainability of populations that can’t withstand commercialization.”

In a separate case, the Spokane County Superior Court fined the owner of a Spokane food market $1,000 on Dec. 22 for two felony convictions of illegally trafficking in wildlife.

A Spokane jury found Jason Yon, 51, owner of JAX Market on East Mission Street, guilty of purchasing four bear gall bladders from WDFW officers during an undercover investigation in 2008. In addition to the fine, Yon forfeited $800 he paid to buy the gall bladders.

Cenci said WDFW relies heavily on tips from hunters and people in local communities about illegal wildlife-trafficking operations. He asks that people who believe they have witnessed these crimes call WDFW Enforcement at (360) 902-2936.

Symbol of Justice

eBlindWolfThe wolf is not always a feared and hated creature. In the medieval village of Utrecht, Netherlands the symbol of justice is the wolf.

The courtyard of the criminal justice center displays a magnificent statue of a blindfolded white wolf. Why the blindfold? Because as the saying goes “justice is blind”. This is done in order to indicate that justice is (or should be) meted out objectively, without fear or favor, regardless of identity, money, power, or weakness.

 

 eCanal

The irony is that today in America we are struggling to treat the wolf in this same frame of context and blind objectivity.

Utrecht was created almost 2,000 years ago by the occupying Roman army. The Romans introduced many cultural changes and advancements. They were ultimately “run out of town” by the invading germanic tribes.

The city was never bombed in World War II and still retains it’s old world charm and unique architecture.

photo credits Dennis Ryan