So on Wednesday, for a break, Perry & I went out and retrieved a camera from one of our carcass intercept feeding sites. This particular site was way back in the Gladstone Valley, we first hauled our quads to Beaver Mines Lake then quaded for about an hour, as far as we could go with them, then we got off and hiked for another hour into the site.
It was a warm day so we stopped to fill our water bottles in the Gladstone.
Gladstone Valley! We were probably farther than most humans have gone in this valley, it was a hard hike, there were lots of dead fall in the bush that we had to climb over or crawl under.
When we put the camera out here, the first of April, there was 5-6 feet of snow! This day there was a bit of snow on the other side of the creek and it was 25 degrees out; the water in the creek was about zero!
Here's some of the bears I dealt with this week...
This guy looks like he's reading the "DO NOT ENTER" sign above the door of the trap, he was coming into this guy's backyard and eating out of his bird feeders. I wasn't able to catch him even though he went into the trap, he was able to engage the safety stop and the door only went halfway down before it stopped and he was able to get out.
This was the same trap a few days later, I ended up catching this little bear cub and his sibling, mom (who, as you can see was a beautiful blond color) was not very happy. When Perry & I arrived he covered me while I lifted the door and let the little guys free!
My last day of work we got a call about a bear in a tree in an acreage owner's shelter belt, when we arrived we found this guy hanging out, literally! I had one of the dog guys from Blairmore with me so we decided to haze him out of the area instead of capturing him and relocating him. This turned out to be a big mistake since a couple of hours later he ended up in a tree in Cowley - a small town along Highway 3, just west of Pincher Station; this time he was captured and relocated!
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