Life cut short for a male grizzly bear! Grizzly bear

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Male bears right out of the gate have it tough. Mom usually shows it tough love especially when it is time to part ways when they reach 2-3 years of age. These young males will float around in their mother's territories visiting all the locations she taught him, but he is on borrowed time. He will have to leave. Like females especially with cubs, these adolecent bears choose to stay around high human activity knowing large dominant male bears won't enter these areas, using us to shield themselves. At this age these bears have no status or rank and will be ran off by females and potentially killed by males. Usually they start to wander off at the age of 3-5 once they have put on enough size and weight, hopefully with the ability to compete with the big boys. Their travels usually take them to premium food sources much richer than you find in their mother's home range, but sometimes it leads them to becoming opportunistic when it comes to attaining foods. Many males end up being destroyed for getting into garbage, fruit trees, livestock, etc, it is how they become massive and the most dominant bears. It creates human/wildlife conflict issues with the bear losing out in most cases.
    For me, this bear, GB# 163 was an amazing bear to work with for his first three years, but as soon as he traveled into BC and to the townsite of Elkford I knew he was on borrowed time. I drove 400km to check on him and his growth was huge, he was the biggest three year old I had seen. There was tons of images and videos of him climbing fences to feed on fruit trees, or flipping garbage cans, feeding on roadside carcasses not cleaned up, many times with another bear. With no actual bear aversion management I volunteered to come work him out of town knowing I could, but politics and provincial borders kept that from happening. Like so many other bears his fate was doomed and a decision was made to have him destroyed. I got the sad news that went along with the news GB# 162, also a male from our area in Alberta, followed that route down the Elk Valley and was struck and killed by Sparwood, as well as GB# 148, a Banff/Bow Valley female grizzly who was shot after being relocated in BC, part of the province's last hunts before it was officially closed. 2017 was rough on the bears of the area.

Komentáře • 529

  • @shellbell2117
    @shellbell2117 Před 2 lety +16

    Actually saddened me
    He was Soo beautiful he was not even bad bear 🐻

  • @burtharbenson8860
    @burtharbenson8860 Před 2 lety +94

    The speed those bears went up that incline, and seemingly increased their stamina and power the further they ran. At that weight to run like that is absolutely astonishing

    • @jackgarand7284
      @jackgarand7284 Před 2 lety +10

      Many people think that bears are slow going uphill. LOL.

    • @ElementUup511
      @ElementUup511 Před 2 lety +9

      keep in mind that was playing. they can keep that up for miles

    • @burtharbenson8860
      @burtharbenson8860 Před 2 lety +7

      @@ElementUup511 yep ur absolutely right. I took my kids to this natural type of zoo in northern Michigan and they had a Siberian male we were able to stand two feet from him. He was so chill, but in a matter of a tenth of a second he went from eyes closing relaxing to 10-15 feet up the tree right by him. I’ve never seen anything move so powerful and fast.

    • @markalan8017
      @markalan8017 Před 2 lety +9

      If you want to know how fast a bear can get to yah just watch a horse run. It's very similar!😂 People look at a 600lb bear and think sluggish. Hate to be the bearer of bad news but they are brown lightning. 2 to 10 people are ripped up every year. Because people under estimate these highly intelligent freakishly strong animals.

    • @burtharbenson8860
      @burtharbenson8860 Před 2 lety +4

      @@markalan8017 uhhhh, your response is all the info I need, thank you very much lol

  • @deanlawson6880
    @deanlawson6880 Před 10 měsíci +9

    Awww... What a well done and nice video documenting the short life of this magnificent bear.
    Thanks for putting this together and sharing this out so we could all appreciate him. RIP to Grizzly 163.

  • @MLJ7424
    @MLJ7424 Před 2 lety +23

    Rip 163 , you were a good boy

    • @DoubleDogDare54
      @DoubleDogDare54 Před 2 lety

      No, he wasn't. He was a stupid bear and paid the price for it. Darwin.

    • @keykattrudelle8227
      @keykattrudelle8227 Před 2 lety +6

      He was a good bear. It is sad they didn't try to do more to discourage these bears! After all it is their space we have encroached so they really deserve our every effort to live in harmony with them! Saying it was "euthanized" makes it sound less tragic than the actual slaughter of an innocent bear just for doing "bear" things! 😢😭

    • @DoubleDogDare54
      @DoubleDogDare54 Před 2 lety

      @@keykattrudelle8227 No, it is not "their space". It is our space and they are the ones encroaching and causing trouble.
      I have zero interest in trying to live in harmony with large predators of any species because it never works. Tree huggers want us to back down to these predators and the predators want to destroy our property and eat us if they are given the chance.
      That might work in your little tree hugging world but it does not work in mine. I am too practical.
      The best means of discouraging these bears is a shotgun. Shoot all the dumb ones on sight and the smart ones will make a serious effort to avoid all humans and human habitation.

  • @willstuart4504
    @willstuart4504 Před rokem +6

    I know how this story makes Me feel.... can't imagine how devastating learning of this would've been for YOU?!?
    It's a sad thing when a beautiful bear dies at the hands of Humans, for the safety of Humans, for no other reason except a bear being a bear searching for food.
    And of course he pays the ultimate price for having HIS natural habitat constantly infringed upon... 🤔
    It's not surprising this happens but it's still disturbing, and I can imagine after following and looking out for this young Bear #163 for his entire life... that hearing this news bothers you deeply.
    All you can do is take solice in knowing he was a Happy bear, and a Good bear... and because of You, the world now gets to see this too. 👍👍 Well done mate.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před rokem +5

      The politics that govern bear management are so frustrating, especially with provincial borders get in the way as well. This didn't sit well with me but my hands were tied. When the top makes decisions, they don't listen to those in the field who are at the bottom.

  • @robertwaid3579
    @robertwaid3579 Před 2 lety +6

    To The Bear Guy. That was Truly Wonderful about #GB 163 & His Short unfortunate Life.
    Did you just get the News Last week from Wyoming. About GB#399s Two n Half yr Old Male Cub #1057.
    That it Similarly had to be Euthanized, Down in the the Upper Green River area for getting into Numerous Trouble with Humans.
    It Seems like Thier Young Lives n Adventure's aren't too Much Different from Our Own. Thanks again for Sharing. Wyo, Robert,🇨🇦🇺🇸🇨🇦🇺🇸🇨🇦🇺🇸😎😎🤔🤔👏👏🙏🙏🙏

    • @jimcrawford2219
      @jimcrawford2219 Před měsícem

      Thankyou bear guy for this story. Our grizzly bears in Idaho are struggling too...recently a mother and two cubs got too close to humans and were euthanized

  • @GT-mn3bx
    @GT-mn3bx Před 2 lety +44

    Watching them run is crazy. They haul the mail, even uphill.

  • @tonyperone3242
    @tonyperone3242 Před 2 lety +79

    A very sad ending for such a remarkable Bear.

    • @markalan8017
      @markalan8017 Před 2 lety +3

      He didn't die. He was in the film last second.it was the bear that led em into people's yards towards the end of this video.#163 is thriving from what I gather

    • @verdreymasonmadzimoyo2340
      @verdreymasonmadzimoyo2340 Před 2 lety +9

      @@markalan8017 Yes, sadly he was euthanized. The last statement ) on the upper right of the screen) says the short life of a bear, referring to #163.

    • @smokescreen2146
      @smokescreen2146 Před 2 lety +7

      Do people not know how to erect fenced walls and gates. Do they think the own the whole place?

    • @JomoDaMusicMan
      @JomoDaMusicMan Před 2 lety +8

      @@smokescreen2146 DO U REALLY THINK A FENCE OR GATE IS GOING TO KEEP A GRIZZLE OUT/OFF OF YOUR PROPERTY

    • @smokescreen2146
      @smokescreen2146 Před 2 lety +5

      @@JomoDaMusicMan Yes, because I don't go around planting fruit trees in bear land. Fool.

  • @milkaicex9199
    @milkaicex9199 Před 2 lety +100

    It's a great pity that animals always pay for human negligence.🐻

    • @rw7594
      @rw7594 Před 2 lety +8

      It is sad. Elkford is surrounded in the forest. They know better. I even remember signs posted in town years ago telling people to keep attractants secured properly.

    • @juliebryne2903
      @juliebryne2903 Před 2 lety +17

      @@rw7594 they should jail and HEAVILY fine the ppl who cause this and not kill the bears! Theyre punishing the wrong party! It makes me angry when they do that!😡

    • @louisebrown07
      @louisebrown07 Před 2 lety

      @@rw7594 ,h by

    • @timbodnar6711
      @timbodnar6711 Před 2 lety +12

      What? That bear went there on it's own. Humans aren't responsible for everything.

    • @andrewturk6562
      @andrewturk6562 Před 2 lety +1

      Why

  • @tracyjohnstoncaruso6065
    @tracyjohnstoncaruso6065 Před rokem +25

    He was magnificent. So sad he's gone. Thank you for following and sharing his story with us. RIP

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před rokem +8

      Thanks for watching, it was not the news I wanted that day. put a lot of work in with this bear.

  • @tiffanyb.7596
    @tiffanyb.7596 Před 2 lety +14

    #163 so beautiful. 😢💜
    Thank you for this video.

  • @PVo-1111
    @PVo-1111 Před 2 lety +14

    R.I.P. #163. Such a beautiful bear.

  • @ljon2243
    @ljon2243 Před 2 lety +5

    We who watch these excellent videos should share them widely. People need to be educated, especially the ones who are fortunate enough to live in this beautiful place. It's still amazing how many people are ignorant and careless enough to attract bears and put them in danger.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +1

      Please share, thank you!

    • @keykattrudelle8227
      @keykattrudelle8227 Před 2 lety +1

      Agreed!

    • @TC-dw6wg
      @TC-dw6wg Před 7 měsíci

      You don’t have to attract any Bear for it to destroy or kill. Wake up ignorant child and stop commenting if you have ZERO EXPERIENCE with bears.

  • @lllSTRIK3Rlll
    @lllSTRIK3Rlll Před rokem +2

    Not easy being so cute and helpless, sweet mama bear can only do so much. Wish i had a big land and they can all live there protected.

  • @susancoddington6393
    @susancoddington6393 Před 2 lety +51

    It’s so incredibly sad that humans have to destroy everything beautiful

    • @shawnkincheloesr5192
      @shawnkincheloesr5192 Před rokem +4

      Yup & I totally agree with you 🙏🏾😞

    • @adventurousbec
      @adventurousbec Před rokem +3

      Agreed! "Unsecured attractants and fruit trees" are actions that can be managed!

    • @DIGITALDOGMUCK
      @DIGITALDOGMUCK Před rokem +2

      VERY true unfortunately 😢

    • @remotefaith
      @remotefaith Před 10 měsíci +17

      Watch a bear eat an animal alive if you want to see the absence of the beautiful

    • @certificate98
      @certificate98 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Humans happiest when destroying things. Power without responsibility.

  • @terrykline1358
    @terrykline1358 Před 2 lety +13

    Why couldn’t he be relocated? Seems to be a better option than putting him down. Great video in the short life of the beautiful bear

    • @callumclark3358
      @callumclark3358 Před 2 lety +3

      I think once they learn these habits they can’t be un-learned. Wherever you put them, they’ll seek out habitations and be a danger to the people living there.

    • @shellbell2117
      @shellbell2117 Před 2 lety

      Beautiful he was

    • @michaellutcher214
      @michaellutcher214 Před 2 lety +4

      Right I said something similar just makes me mad I had a naboir that put there dog down because one eye was going blind the vet said to them so they did that and I stop talking to em

    • @keykattrudelle8227
      @keykattrudelle8227 Před 2 lety +1

      That was a beautiful video, such a sad end! If bears are foraging where humans now live, doesn't that mean it was once the bears territory? Aren't we the ones who have encroached on their space? Humans are so arrogant. We should do all we can to minimize these sad and negative outcomes!

    • @TedH71
      @TedH71 Před 2 lety +1

      Costly plus relocating just puts the bear in ANOTHER bear's terriorty and that bear will end up being killed. A lot of them will go back to their lands pretty quick too.

  • @user-wz8fb7nz3u
    @user-wz8fb7nz3u Před 9 měsíci +3

    I totally enjoyed watching your video. Bears remind me so much of big playful puppy dogs. It's amazing how they retain their family bonds. His demise broke my heart for him and for you too!! It's hard when there's nothing one can do to save wildlife, especially when we have a bond with them and know they are good. 💔

  • @EcouragingGodStories
    @EcouragingGodStories Před 2 lety +21

    A really enjoyable video. Thanks for making it, and all the time you spent in the woods finding the bears to video! Five plus gold stars!

    • @honestchris7472
      @honestchris7472 Před 2 lety +1

      Nothing at all to do with an imaginary god, this is all about nature.

    • @honestchris7472
      @honestchris7472 Před 2 lety

      @@sq6529 everything evolved to what it now is from evolution and evolution is still happening.

  • @nilolins
    @nilolins Před 2 lety +12

    First time watching one of your vids. Thank you , great stuff. Didn't know GBs were so social. Sad what happened to GB 163!

  • @rvasquez8057
    @rvasquez8057 Před 2 lety +5

    Sad ending to a magnificent animal.

  • @theCosmicQueen
    @theCosmicQueen Před 2 lety +24

    they are so athletic. anyone who has seen a really wet bear, can see they aren't really fat, just have fluffy hair. it's all powerhouse muscle. they are super athletes.

  • @gdupkwin9676
    @gdupkwin9676 Před 9 měsíci +2

    This video was amazing 👏

  • @jeannepeters8836
    @jeannepeters8836 Před 2 lety +9

    Beautiful footage.. Very sad story of a magnificent bear.
    🌻🐻🐾🌿🌷🐾 RIP 163

  • @hotbit7327
    @hotbit7327 Před 2 lety +8

    Amazing video.
    But, let's be straight. He was not 'euthanized', he was murdered.

  • @llov5320
    @llov5320 Před 2 lety +13

    He was an extremely handsome boy... I'm so sorry. I really want to believe there should be other way, but I know you did everything for him. Thank you for teaching us about what's happening to those beautiful creatures in Canada.

  • @donniecash1737
    @donniecash1737 Před rokem +3

    Poor guy. R.I.P. bear. He did nothing wrong.

  • @dyates6380
    @dyates6380 Před 2 lety +24

    I absolutely love all of these videos. Outstanding job presenting these magnificent creatures. Thanks for keeping these coming. On a side note, why couldn't the bear just be relocated? It seems tragic that such a healthy and as you put it, good natured and "not a bad bear" was put down. I guess I don't understand all the nuances involved, but damn.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +14

      Down in BC where it happened, it probably breaks down to a lack of funding and manpower, a common problem when government conservation agencies are associated. I know personally I couldn't justify euthanizing an animal unless for humane reasons. But I guess if they had grizzlies running through the streets and into backyards, with no way of getting the people to clean up there garbage, remove fruit trees and attractants, and no crew to trap and relocate the bear in this case, than I can see where upper management says just deal with it. It breaks my heart cause it's a bear I put a ton of time and effort into while he was north in Alberta, but that's the difference, we had dedicated funding for a bear program with a skeleton crew that could work and condition the bears. We didn't relocate or euthanize as a norm. Unfortunately other locations are and were strapped for cash and handcuffed at the same time.

    • @farmari87
      @farmari87 Před 2 lety +7

      @@TheBearGuyCanada In the modest sense, you need 2 guys, tranquilizer and a vehicle to move the bear to the different location. How this can be so difficult task for a human being.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +11

      @@farmari87 ,relocating a bear isn't just taking it up the road, it will just return to the exact location. Many times it involves anywhere from 400-1000 km away from the initial location. I know of one bear that was relocated for killing cattle only to be back killing cattle the following season on the same ranch, he was moved 1100km. Because you are trying to remove it from areas with human activity that means going somewhere remote, sometimes involving a helicopter at the end. It is not a cheap thing to do if you have programs or agencies that are restricted to a hard budget.

    • @ThatTaRaGiRL
      @ThatTaRaGiRL Před 2 lety +6

      @@TheBearGuyCanada The part that involves "people cleaning up their trash" and such... these people should be fined the 1st time and then given 30 days jailtime-NO questions asked! Why don't the PEOPLE ever get in trouble for this heinous crap!? Causing the death of a good natured, young and healthy bear NEEDS to start coming with CONSEQUENCES! OTHERWISE, we might as well put them on the endangered species list and just freaking sit back as we willingly watch them VANISH! You have more heart and tolerance than I do... I couldn't just watch this continuously happen. For the love of christ..... anyway- thanks for delivering such great work. Great to see such awesomeness turn to sh*t and nothing MAINLY thanks to HUMANS.... I can't watch anymore. Unsubbed... only because I can't stand to watch such a waste. Please provide a way we can change the laws..something we can all sign...well if people gave a crap and could get their lazy asses to just move their fingers a little and sign. Who am I kidding though?? Yea.. it'll never happen. My surrounding Americans are just too lazy and useless..... just look at what the Country has become right now... our forefathers would sh*t their pants and laugh at the lack of camaraderie.

    • @smokescreen2146
      @smokescreen2146 Před 2 lety +8

      @@ThatTaRaGiRL Instead of scaring the bear away with loud sounds and firecrackers like the natives do, they took the easy way out with guns and needles. Canada for you.

  • @dickdastardly5534
    @dickdastardly5534 Před 2 lety +6

    Heart breaking really such a magnificent creature wasted because of human failings.

    • @haylobos8261
      @haylobos8261 Před 2 lety

      It is a mangy critter. You need glasses and moore bran sells.

    • @dickdastardly5534
      @dickdastardly5534 Před 2 lety

      @@haylobos8261 Well I clearly have more than you judging by your grammar and spelling.

    • @keykattrudelle8227
      @keykattrudelle8227 Před 2 lety +1

      @hay lobos a glaring example of ignorance

    • @haylobos8261
      @haylobos8261 Před 2 lety

      @@keykattrudelle8227 Okay it is a Nobel Prize winner. Lou niece libre earle.

    • @remotefaith
      @remotefaith Před 10 měsíci

      It’s one bear ffs

  • @Animal-Reaction-Clips
    @Animal-Reaction-Clips Před 2 lety +5

    Why are people so fkn ignorant and leave food around

  • @kristieingram2039
    @kristieingram2039 Před 2 lety +19

    I understand that some species have to be kept under control for many reasons but if it was left up to me to kill them they would not get killed.....
    Unless it was life or death situation ....
    This was a sad story but it's life in this world as we know it now....
    Bless you for protecting the bears as all animal species need help these days

    • @spiderreed350
      @spiderreed350 Před 2 lety +1

      Ben Gazzi?

    • @haylobos8261
      @haylobos8261 Před 2 lety

      They are just critters. Get the grip lew knees.

    • @deeeplygoated4261
      @deeeplygoated4261 Před 2 lety

      @@haylobos8261 They critters but they big critters to big to ignore.

    • @haylobos8261
      @haylobos8261 Před 2 lety

      @@deeeplygoated4261 Does bigger make them better? No. Stop spowting nun cens.

    • @deeeplygoated4261
      @deeeplygoated4261 Před 2 lety

      @@haylobos8261 Bigger means more important you don't get all emotional when you swat a fly but you wet your britches when a dog or a cat gets put down. It's a bias or a preference regardless of how you put it.

  • @thomasgumersell9607
    @thomasgumersell9607 Před 2 lety +8

    Human encroachment upon more and more wild areas. Simply puts many Bears at risk. I understand if a Bear attacks a person. It may need to be put down. Yet for simply doing what a Bear does? Foraging for food in Apple / fruit orchards they run the risk of being shot. We have to learn how to coexist with the wildlife around us. 💪🏼

    • @EperogiLimousine
      @EperogiLimousine Před rokem +1

      Yeah, ok, but we really can’t leave them in the wild, we need another solution

  • @madelainesherwood5903
    @madelainesherwood5903 Před 2 lety +2

    He should NEVER have been euthanized! The bears were there first! Rotten people!

  • @GT-mn3bx
    @GT-mn3bx Před 2 lety +3

    Love the bears and cubbies.

  • @scottwyckoff5483
    @scottwyckoff5483 Před 2 lety +10

    noble beasts, they deserve respect

  • @Endless_Moments
    @Endless_Moments Před 7 měsíci +1

    Amazing, thanks for sharing

  • @markthomas4083
    @markthomas4083 Před rokem +1

    Very disturbing. We can build farther into the formerly wild areas without a problem. The bear paid the ultimate price for being himself, without any offensive behavior.

  • @garysiegenthaler6532
    @garysiegenthaler6532 Před 2 lety +6

    I am so saddened beyond words by the needless killing of this majestic animal. They were here first and part of God's plan. They do what comes naturally, the way they were created to live and exist. Yet, we won't give them ample space to live out their natural lives. 🐻🐻🙏🏻🇺🇸😥

  • @FlyTyer1948
    @FlyTyer1948 Před 2 lety +9

    Such a sad end.
    I didn’t know grizzly males would buddy up with another male. Does that provide any protection from large males who would kill or chase them off?
    I’m used to being around & sometimes accidentally close to black bears near our cabin in northern Maine or while fishing beaver ponds. I respect black bears & leave when they are near, but I view grizzlies as much more dangerous.
    It’s disappointing that there wasn’t a way to relocate that bear away from people

    • @tima.478
      @tima.478 Před 2 lety +6

      Damn shame really. A bear being killed for being a bear.

    • @worldtraveler721
      @worldtraveler721 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tima.478 Exactly my thoughts!

    • @waynetompkins3006
      @waynetompkins3006 Před 7 měsíci

      Are male grizzly bears gay or bicurious? Why was he hanging with that older bear?

  • @chadrowe8452
    @chadrowe8452 Před 2 lety +9

    You just ripped my heart out of my chest

    • @michaellutcher214
      @michaellutcher214 Před 2 lety

      Ok wow

    • @jerulew3547
      @jerulew3547 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, that animal killing, maiming hurts. Shows lack of respect tolerance for other living things. No love.

  • @serafinmagic1634
    @serafinmagic1634 Před 2 lety +1

    I don't get it. Couldn't they relocate him? Or scare him away with bottle rockets shot at them like they do with polar bears. He was just being a bear.

  • @georgekerr8804
    @georgekerr8804 Před 2 lety +1

    Great bear footage

  • @fairgolfer
    @fairgolfer Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks

  • @yossarianmnichols9641
    @yossarianmnichols9641 Před 2 lety +7

    quite a unique video, how did you track him? Did he have a RFID tag or whatever they tag cattle with? I lived in Alaska 28 years. The mature males always seem to avoid people but the young ones would walk right in to your camp and they liked to work the uninhabited cabins. They tagged a bunch of bears in Anchorage and published a map in the local paper showing all their amblings. People were surprised that brown bears were in the heart of the city going under the hwy in tunnels built for joggers and skiers. Black bears, on the other hand, want to be your best friend and will never leave you if they get a free meal.

    • @ThatTaRaGiRL
      @ThatTaRaGiRL Před 2 lety

      I live in upstate NY and black bears are MORE likely to chase you for food (YOU being the food source) than grizzlies..... a grizzlie will typically only attack to guard it's kill, guard it's young, or neutralize you if they feel you're a threat.... that's why the old saying stands true: if it's brown, lay down (play dead and they will be more likely to think they neutralized their perceived threat and go away) and if it's black, FIGHT BACK... as they will NOT go away and will eat you ALIVE! PLEASE remember this! Say it with me now- If it's brown, lay down, if it's black, fight back! lol This could very well save your life one day! It did mine! 👍🏻

  • @sherryanimallover7506

    So beautiful they are. ❤️🇺🇸🦋🙏🦋🇺🇸❤️

  • @avalon1rae
    @avalon1rae Před rokem

    Humans can't be the problem. Bears Lives Matter.

  • @salsanchez2114
    @salsanchez2114 Před 2 lety +1

    Very informative. Thank you.

  • @KittyGrizGriz
    @KittyGrizGriz Před 9 měsíci +1

    These are so hard to watch, love Grizzlies

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yeah 18 years of being involved in bear management in one way or another, there is definitely amazing moments and some that just rip your heart out. This was one that hurt.

  • @theshadow3001
    @theshadow3001 Před rokem

    Short but good life for a bear

  • @davidammons1700
    @davidammons1700 Před rokem

    Animals put on earth for us too eat clothe us and our enjoyment

  • @smellyolegoat150
    @smellyolegoat150 Před 2 lety +2

    That is so sad! There are simply to many of us on this planet. Also, because of that fact, we need to make every possible effort to deter grizzly bears from areas of human habitation so it doesn’t come to this outcome.

  • @ibnyahud
    @ibnyahud Před 7 měsíci

    i actually had no idea that adolescent grizzlies paired up like young lions do

  • @carolehemming5260
    @carolehemming5260 Před 2 lety

    Was is to much for them to relocate its not his fault if he has easy pickings people should secure their rubbish what a waist of a beautiful creature through human ignorance thankyou for a breath taking veiw in his short life 💙 ❤ 💜

  • @vanessashuttleworth4363
    @vanessashuttleworth4363 Před 2 lety +2

    That's so sad I cried...why didn't they just relocate him???

  • @nwyetiphotography
    @nwyetiphotography Před rokem

    So sad! 163 was such a beautiful bear! You couldn't relocate him back to his mother's range?

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před rokem +1

      A male bear has to leave his mother's range, and they tend to roam a long ways before they sttle into an area. Once a bear crossing lines or boundaries, you lose jurisdiction of that bear. In BC, he fell under their way of managing and they simply didn't have the time or resources to put in on him to alter his behavior. In the case of relocating back to it's mother's range, he'd simply leave and most likely return south where he was finding valuable food sources.

    • @nwyetiphotography
      @nwyetiphotography Před rokem

      @@TheBearGuyCanada that's what happened to 399's cub 1057 in the Grand Teton N.P. . He was relocated twice but kept returning to feed on human foods so euthanizing was the best answer. It must be really tough on you who photographs and knows these bears so well.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před rokem +1

      @@nwyetiphotography , my work is in Canada, so I don't follow to a tee what happens down in the States. For the record I work in bear management and don't actually find and sit on them for images. I will steal a few moments of video here and there in between engaging with the bear or the people that I am trying to manage. I haven't taken a still frame picture of a bear since 2010.

    • @nwyetiphotography
      @nwyetiphotography Před rokem

      @@TheBearGuyCanada Sorry, I knew you were in bear management and not a photographer. I don't know where you got the idea that I insinuated that you were just a Canadian citizen chasing bears for a photo. And excuse me, for the record, let me replace the word photographs with videos. Down here in the states, us Yanks who study bears do photograph them as a visual aid, in addition to radio frequency collars. Again, sorry to offend you. Merry Christmas.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před rokem +1

      @@nwyetiphotography , sorry Will, I took no offense to what you said at all. I have to be careful how I comment and make sure people realize that I'm not chasing them down through my work for video, and that it is a by-product of what I do. I know you know, I have seen you on my content, it's more for anyone who would read our conversation, I try to be as transparent as I can, to take out all the online assumptions. "For the record" perhaps was a bad choice of wording, I apologize for that. But you are right, all the videos i took were to help me establish patterns, behavioral traits, and it was great for ID'ing unknown bears. So once again, no offense taken, and I'm sorry if my comment came across snippy, it wasn't intended like that at all, thanks for following me and my content and have yourself a Merry Xmas.

  • @highhavencabin1494
    @highhavencabin1494 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video!

  • @cricket6410
    @cricket6410 Před 2 lety +5

    I see your answer about relocating. Funding for bear management is not a priority in locales where it is needed. Perhaps due to lack of public awareness of the bears’ plight and the feasibility of humane solutions.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +6

      being involved in Human/wildlife conflict management as a government employee as long as I was before i took on more freelance work, I can tell you the politics and egos involved in bear management are huge. It frustrated me to great lengths to the point I resigned from my dream job in my favorite place on the planet. There is so many levels you have to get through to make any changes for the good. What you end up with is people with no fight left and mailing it in, and that is not good for the environment and the wildlife within it. For someone like me who is a progressive thinker and looking to improve how things are done, it drove me nuts.
      I do disagree with one thing though. The messaging and education to the public in regards to bears falls on deaf ears, but it is out there. People's entitlements whether it is taking pictures of bears to living and recreating in bear country, they will know better. Bear management is 80% people management and our lack of accountability is still the major contributing factor why bears get in trouble and put down.

    • @cricket6410
      @cricket6410 Před 2 lety

      @@TheBearGuyCanada I fully understand. ….and empathize with you tremendously! Environmental management is tougher than ever.

    • @arthurbrumagem3844
      @arthurbrumagem3844 Před 2 lety

      Go fund me to get money to relocate

  • @susana5505
    @susana5505 Před 2 lety +5

    I have watched a handful of these videos. What I wonder is, when they are constantly look at camera, are they thinking" hey, I smell the guy thats always taking my pic"? They are so beautiful. I live outside mpls,MN and once every couple yrs I get black bears walking thru. Had 1 walk past open door, 1 raid bird feeder. Had 1 huff at me, at my open BR window, 3' from my face at abt 2am. Just a screen between my head & his head, that scared me(black bear abt 300 lbs, best guess) . Other weird thing is I have Newfoundland Dogs, they sleep in the BR, they didn't make a sound at this bear!
    I don't think my Newfies have missed alerting me to every single deer, raccoon, possum that comes on property, but a black bear, nope not going to tell mom.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +6

      A bear is always assessing the threat, and whether it can get away or if it's in a comprimising situation that it would have to fight. I call them a bubble animal which most of us are. This means each bear has it's own personal space it feels comfortable in, could be 5m or 100m. If this space is invaded in one way or another the bear's fight or flight will engage. In my case, with me dealing with these bears all the time every day like I used to, they know me, my truck and my voice personally. They watch us intently because we are the ones who discipline them with noise or a low pain stimulas if they get into particular situations around people. So once you build a relationship with bears that frequent your area, in most cases just talking to them will have them bolting for the trees away from human activity. Even when you want the bear to remain and you manage the people and get them to leave, the bear will pick me/us out and automatically leave. It's all a part of grizzly bear aversion and human/wildlife conflict management.

    • @chairlesnicol672
      @chairlesnicol672 Před 2 lety

      @@TheBearGuyCanada your red print is crappy to read can't really tell what u r saying !

  • @doctorartphd6463
    @doctorartphd6463 Před 2 lety

    Great video... Thanks for sharing !!1

  • @robertdavenport856
    @robertdavenport856 Před 2 lety +2

    These wonderful animals are so majestic!

  • @ljon2243
    @ljon2243 Před 2 lety +2

    How sad that BC and Alberta can't work together in cases like this. Politics be damned.

  • @largewoollybugger
    @largewoollybugger Před rokem

    It's heartbreaking he survives a male grizzly attack, only to be killed by humans. It's sad to think that had those humans secured the attractants properly, the outcome could have been different. Sometimes we kind of suck.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před rokem +1

      Biggest obstacle in bear management is the people, bears are true to nature.....people operate out of entitlement and greed and expect bears and all wildlife to adapt.

  • @gdupkwin9676
    @gdupkwin9676 Před 9 měsíci

    My good brother have u seen the grizzly fight for half of an hour BRUTAL!!!!!

  • @IRONHORSE427RACING
    @IRONHORSE427RACING Před 2 lety +8

    Thanks so much for this story. While it's Tragic one can't interfere with what Mother Nature tells him to do. It's a pity that British Columbian Officials didn't contact the US Fish & Wildlife to have us go get him with a tranquilizer gun and bring him back home but I also understand the cost of such things. Given where he was frequenting (around humans I understand....I hate it but understand just wish a little more attempt at discouraging human / Grizzly interaction wasn't a viable option for him)
    Our only hope is he was able to pass on his genetics to the gene pool in Yellowstone so his lineage will walk those lands for years to come.

    • @largewoollybugger
      @largewoollybugger Před rokem

      Wait, how do you know this was a Yellowstone bear? BC is kind of far from Yellowstone.

  • @DIGITALDOGMUCK
    @DIGITALDOGMUCK Před rokem

    Maybe get a lightweight tripod for keeping those long shots steady

  • @DixieJensenBrown
    @DixieJensenBrown Před 2 lety +7

    So sad he could not have been relocated to a safe location for him and away from people... real sad

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +5

      It is sad. But the reality is most agencies are not funded enough to manage bears and to put in the neccessary time needed to alter a bears behavior, or to tend with the humans creating the situations. It's something I have fought for and always get the generic answer, "All available funds and manpower are being made available." It's just not true, I was part of the system, I know the short comings. As for relocation, once again the time and manpower is a huge obstacle. But it's not always a favorable options, but at least it is somewhat of a chance. In many cases bears immediately try to travel back to their designated area. In other cases they struggle with finding food or having to deal with resident bears that don't tolerate other bears. Stats show with black bears, 40-50% of relocations fail with the bear dying. We have seen male grizzlies travel almost a thousand km, most likely not denning to return to the area they got removed from. But you are right, if they couldn't monitor and condition him, I would've much rather seen them try to relocate him, better than the alternative. I would of liked the opportunity to cross the border to work him, but than that's where politics and egos get involved, no body wins, especially the bear.

    • @twostop6895
      @twostop6895 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheBearGuyCanada I’m just wondering if an incident like this of an Alberta Grizzly being killed after arriving in BC is one of many instances that led to the ban of Grizzly bear hunting in BC in 2017

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +1

      @@twostop6895 , it would of had very little impact on that decision. What you will find is a lot of males born in Alberta head to BC, longer growing season, better vegetation, etc. BC, like Alberta was getting so much blow back for the grizzly trophy hunt that it helped sway their vote. With every group involved from biologists to ecologist, indigenous groups, activists, tourism.....it became such a politic platform with so much heat.

    • @twostop6895
      @twostop6895 Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheBearGuyCanada yeah, I'm a big fan of grizzlies always have been, the climate crisis that we are in both Grizzlies and humans will likely struggle to survive in the future, now is not the time to be trophy hunting these animals when the future is so uncertain, I live in Washington state and the North Cascades ecosystem is bigger than Glacier National Park in Northwestern Montana but no Grizzlies, Northwestern Washington to central North Washington is a roadless paradise, but BC Grizzlies are struggling in that area of the North Cascades as well, the last Grizzly in the North Cascades was killed in 1967 in Washington prior to protection in 1975 and it's been nothing but ghost Grizzlies there since, in NE Washington we have a small population close to the Canadian and Idaho border in the Selkirk Mountain region, over the summer Washington state Wildlife officials collared a female grizzly with cubs, that's the 1st time that has happened in Washington in 40 years, I am a Big Bruin advocate

    • @DixieJensenBrown
      @DixieJensenBrown Před 2 lety

      @@TheBearGuyCanada Yes I think they should of let you work with the bear... I am sure he would have survived.

  • @tavitaafamasaga1074
    @tavitaafamasaga1074 Před 9 měsíci

    Like us ... imagine the animals living as one ... 🚶

  • @edgarmorales7855
    @edgarmorales7855 Před 2 lety +3

    How sad 😔 he was a magnificent creature that should have grown up to be king of his domain!!!

    • @tima.478
      @tima.478 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, but interject humans...game over for pretty much everything in the natural world.

  • @SFTink
    @SFTink Před 9 měsíci

    I don't understand why they just didn't relocate the bear instead of taking such an extreme measure.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 7 měsíci

      If you look back on this comment section I have described the issues with relocation. The first issue is in this region they haven't a dedicated team of bear specialists that can work with the bears using aversion. This will teach the bears and keep them alive. But this takes the manpower and the funding to fill those positions, and the BC government doesn't have either in place. So fast forward to relocating, they once again don't have the funding or manpower to do so. The other issue is relocations don't always work, in many cases a bear takes its problems with it and gets shot, or they killed by other resident bears, or starves, or tries to return home. That means to relocate a bear you have to take it really far away, and hopefully far from livestock or communities, or from the reason it got removed for. This has become hard to find these areas. Lastly, from years of relocations, these areas have been saturated with relocated bears and those areas are carrying at capacilty. As a last ditch effort and given a bear somewhat a chance, I'd still rather see it moved......but unless there are agencies with plenty of funding and manpower, bears will unfortunately meet their doom. Each capture and relocation can turn into $10000 plus, especially if a helicopter is needed.

  • @Gerri69
    @Gerri69 Před 2 lety +6

    That is so unfair. It's always the bears that pay the price for stupid people!!

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +1

      A mountain community in today's age, there is no reason it isn't a bear smart community, attractants should be managed and bear proofed. It sets up bears to fail and for wildlife management to have to make terrible decisions.

    • @Gerri69
      @Gerri69 Před 2 lety

      @@TheBearGuyCanada you're right, they should know better by now. My sister lived in Elkford in the late 70's when it was still a thing to head to the dump to see bears. It sure makes me sad and I wish he would have stayed away. 😔

  • @pacunurse1
    @pacunurse1 Před rokem

    So very true and sad!

  • @marklomax7452
    @marklomax7452 Před 9 měsíci

    Euthanized means putting him out of his misery. He wasn't in misery. The homeowners were in misery. He was killed.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 9 měsíci

      Euthanized definitely has a broader meaning depending on which meaning you take. But you are right, basically putting to sleep humanely. Sometimes the word I believe is used to distant themselves from the horrible unnatural act that they had to commit or perform because or an order. Either way, this bear was one of my favorite to work with, and I would've loved to had the chance to see if I could've altered his life choices when he crossed provincial borders. Was not impressed when I got the news.

  • @pierrerobert4339
    @pierrerobert4339 Před 9 měsíci

    Did the Canadian authorities have to?! Could nothing else be done? My heart breaks.

  • @justicewillprevail1106

    Bears have a pretty rough life I’ve always thought.

  • @billbellinger6866
    @billbellinger6866 Před 11 měsíci

    Why did they have to kill him? Did he hurt or kill someone? If not, couldn't they have captured him and relocated him to a more remote area?

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 7 měsíci

      If you look back on this comment section I have described the issues with relocation. The first issue is in this region they haven't a dedicated team of bear specialists that can work with the bears using aversion. This will teach the bears and keep them alive. But this takes the manpower and the funding to fill those positions, and the BC government doesn't have either in place. So fast forward to relocating, they once again don't have the funding or manpower to do so. The other issue is relocations don't always work, in many cases a bear takes its problems with it and gets shot, or they killed by other resident bears, or starves, or tries to return home. That means to relocate a bear you have to take it really far away, and hopefully far from livestock or communities, or from the reason it got removed for. This has become hard to find these areas. Lastly, from years of relocations, these areas have been saturated with relocated bears and those areas are carrying at capacilty. As a last ditch effort and given a bear somewhat a chance, I'd still rather see it moved......but unless there are agencies with plenty of funding and manpower, bears will unfortunately meet their doom. Each capture and relocation can turn into $10000 plus, especially if a helicopter is needed.

  • @kinggeorgewashington
    @kinggeorgewashington Před 9 měsíci

    I wonder why they didn’t take him to NYC. He would have been put up in a hotel and given $2200 a month.
    Really though couldn’t they just drop him off far far away?

  • @traceyboutilier6713
    @traceyboutilier6713 Před 2 lety +8

    Why would BC officials euthanize such a beautiful bear instead of relocating him out in the middle of nowhere?? He looks to be in great shape plus he wasn’t that old?? To me that is CRIMINAL and a poor decision made by the BC park or game wardens!!!! It’s a bloody cop out to not relocate this magnificent animal!!!!

    • @elizabethhardersen9679
      @elizabethhardersen9679 Před 2 lety

      Any bear that becomes habituated to humans becomes a danger to humans. Especially because this is a large mature male grizzly bear any interaction with humans could be fatal for the human. They can’t relocate him because he has a huge range, he will just gravitate to where people live again. It’s very unfortunate but any bear that’s habituated is a dead bear. That’s why it’s really important that humans not provide food sources, including securing things like fruit trees and livestock with electric fences

    • @hippopotamus6765
      @hippopotamus6765 Před 2 lety +1

      Totally agree. I'd like to know their reasoning.

  • @jsatv7443
    @jsatv7443 Před rokem

    Thanks for Sharing but sad ending 😩😭

  • @fionabrennan7302
    @fionabrennan7302 Před 2 lety +8

    Such a beautiful creature. It's so sad that humans don't care enough to prevent unnecessary euthanasia of animals being wild and free. They should be fined for failing to heed the signs

    • @juliebryne2903
      @juliebryne2903 Před 2 lety +2

      FINED AND JAILED! 1ST OFFENSE!!😡

    • @timbodnar6711
      @timbodnar6711 Před 2 lety

      So we should live a throttled life? Everything is going to die one day. You people act like we are going to continue living as a species forever. One day the human race will be a memory of the universe. Fines and jail!? 😂

    • @timbodnar6711
      @timbodnar6711 Před 2 lety

      @@timchamberlin9280 no shit, there's a difference. And?

    • @timbodnar6711
      @timbodnar6711 Před 2 lety

      @@timchamberlin9280 another person putting feelings over facts. Good luck.

    • @fionabrennan7302
      @fionabrennan7302 Před 2 lety

      @@timbodnar6711 Your lack of respect for nature says a lot about you.

  • @lindasiroskey326
    @lindasiroskey326 Před 2 lety

    So sad beautiful animal

  • @Critter_Clips
    @Critter_Clips Před 2 lety +2

    That's so sad. He was a beautiful bear. Humans are always causing these problems.

  • @annalisa14
    @annalisa14 Před 2 lety

    What a nice zoom you have! What is it ?

  • @mrkoolio4475
    @mrkoolio4475 Před 2 lety +1

    Why couldn’t the bear be relocated?

  • @rosemaxx3987
    @rosemaxx3987 Před 2 lety +4

    What a sad end, he was just so social an animal.. we had bears in Banff that were in town a lot and never bothered anyone, Ginger for one! So sad when they are destroyed!

  • @jstraus34
    @jstraus34 Před 2 lety +2

    Sad but the reality is bears and people cannot exist in the same space, one has to go. If you're hiking in the bears territory and don't have a gun/bear spray or both, its you that getting put down.

    • @danni1993
      @danni1993 Před 2 lety

      People need to stay OUT of the bear's house and let them live in peace.
      If a criminal broke into someone's house and got shot, that would be the criminal's fault, wouldn't it?

    • @haylobos8261
      @haylobos8261 Před 2 lety

      @@danni1993 There is no bear house. They are critters. Stop spowting nun cens lou knee.

  • @elainehammond4598
    @elainehammond4598 Před 2 lety +1

    Why didn't they relocate him?

  • @blackie1of4
    @blackie1of4 Před 10 měsíci

    Bears face many obstacles especially when they are young.. however.. I believe that the biggest obstacle is land!
    Good habit is occupied by the biggest males.. and younger males have to fight ( flight ) for their lives just trying to find a place to live! Which puts them in the vicinity of humans!
    Bears don't live long hanging around people! It's not that people aren't tolerant.. it's more so to do with the destruction they cause! Then the possibility of an attack on humans livestock and pets!
    All of which is due to the carrying capacity of the land!
    Are there more places in our country where they could flourish.. of course! Time will tell!
    PS.. most conflicts are with sub adults! Young males trying to find a place to live 😢

  • @05MaryBeth
    @05MaryBeth Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you for this video, on this young bear. It was so neat to see him as a cub and to grow to be an adult it's sad that he had to be euthanized by humans and they couldn't just relocate him . Like you said he was a good bear I just think it's sad that what the outcome was.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 7 měsíci +1

      If you look back on this comment section I have described the issues with relocation. The first issue is in this region they haven't a dedicated team of bear specialists that can work with the bears using aversion. This will teach the bears and keep them alive. But this takes the manpower and the funding to fill those positions, and the BC government doesn't have either in place. So fast forward to relocating, they once again don't have the funding or manpower to do so. The other issue is relocations don't always work, in many cases a bear takes its problems with it and gets shot, or they killed by other resident bears, or starves, or tries to return home. That means to relocate a bear you have to take it really far away, and hopefully far from livestock or communities, or from the reason it got removed for. This has become hard to find these areas. Lastly, from years of relocations, these areas have been saturated with relocated bears and those areas are carrying at capacilty. As a last ditch effort and given a bear somewhat a chance, I'd still rather see it moved......but unless there are agencies with plenty of funding and manpower, bears will unfortunately meet their doom. Each capture and relocation can turn into $10000 plus, especially if a helicopter is needed.

    • @05MaryBeth
      @05MaryBeth Před 7 měsíci

      Wow I didn't realize this. It's to bad they don't have the man power and they funds to full fill helping the wildlife in the area.

  • @leftylou6070
    @leftylou6070 Před 2 lety

    Where I live a 350lb bear is huge. Ok you can laugh now.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety

      350 - 400 pounds is a mature females bodyweight for an interior grizzly prior to den. A male is 500-700 as a norm.

  • @chrislj2890
    @chrislj2890 Před 11 měsíci

    Euthanized? That word used in this context seems so disingenuous.I don't think it was put out of its misery, it was just plain killed. In reality it was put out of peoples' misery; not the same thing. Then again, if it showed up in my back yard and was a threat I'd put it down in a heartbeat.

  • @dannyd8625
    @dannyd8625 Před rokem

    If anyone knows, what is the survival rate of Bears? With Lions, I've read anywhere from 3 out of 4 to 7 out of 8 don't make it to adulthood. Those aren't good odds. I was hoping that most of the bears were able to become adults.

  • @mg4361
    @mg4361 Před 2 lety +14

    Why euthanize him?!? Why not tranquilize and relocate? Brown bears are amazing creatures and there are many areas where they are locally endangered, where he could have been moved.

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +10

      Down in BC where it happened, it probably breaks down to a lack of funding and manpower, a common problem when government conservation agencies are associated. I know personally I couldn't justify euthanizing an animal unless for humane reasons. But I guess if they had grizzlies running through the streets and into backyards, with no way of getting the people to clean up there garbage, remove fruit trees and attractants, and no crew to trap and relocate the bear in this case, than I can see where upper management says just deal with it. It breaks my heart cause it's a bear I put a ton of time and effort into while he was north in Alberta, but that's the difference, we had dedicated funding for a bear program with a skeleton crew that could work and condition the bears. We didn't relocate or euthanize as a norm. Unfortunately other locations are and were strapped for cash and handcuffed at the same time.

    • @juliebryne2903
      @juliebryne2903 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheBearGuyCanada if theyd jail and HEAVILY fine(minimim 5,000$)ppl they would generate plenty of revenue! Do it on the very 1st offense and the money would pour in!

    • @TheBearGuyCanada
      @TheBearGuyCanada  Před 2 lety +1

      @@juliebryne2903 , We all have very strong opinions on what should happen or be done, the problem is getting the laws to catch up or the politicians to buy in. There is so many bear politics it isn't even funny, and no one wants to become the heavy hand because that may hurt their future agendas and platforms. You can sing that song till you don't have a voice, the challenge is getting someone to listen and implement new policy, very frustrating!

    • @juliebryne2903
      @juliebryne2903 Před 2 lety

      @@TheBearGuyCanada i bet it is! The #1 thing that must be done is to ban the lobbyists(they are why polititians don't hear us)! Hunters are responsible for nothing being done to save them in this case right along with ranchers! They get their lobbyists to stop anything from being done to save the bears because they dont want them there!

    • @kathleengeiser6956
      @kathleengeiser6956 Před 2 lety

      ​@@TheBearGuyCanada maybe it's time to enlist the media, and get some wildlife conservationists involved to change this backward thinking. if enough people demand change, I'm sure the money could be found to relocate these young healthy bears. there is a program up in Lake Tahoe that uses negative reinforcement for problem bears. they have one ranger who does excellent work keeping these bears out of trouble. B.C. could learn a lot from his work.

  • @sbuxguy
    @sbuxguy Před 2 lety

    7.5 BILLION people, I think we save a few Grizzly Bears and spare a few billion people along the way.

  • @madelainesherwood5903
    @madelainesherwood5903 Před 2 lety +1

    I love them so much!

  • @debbieross1218
    @debbieross1218 Před 2 lety

    Such a fine bear,ended his life early.

  • @cricket6410
    @cricket6410 Před 2 lety +1

    They couldn’t relocate him?

  • @jenisecoronado5555
    @jenisecoronado5555 Před 2 lety +1

    Very, very sad!

  • @raybo632
    @raybo632 Před 9 měsíci

    What amazes me we worship the creation rather then the CREATOR. Romans CHAPTER 1 starting at verse 18.

  • @DIYDaveT
    @DIYDaveT Před 2 lety +2

    If any human says they will treat you humanely, run like Hell.

  • @taffyb4007
    @taffyb4007 Před rokem

    People, you need to learn how to coexist with wildlife, how about putting them first for a change!

  • @sherryanimallover7506

    If you are tracking them how come you not do something before this to have happened.