Wanda's Blog From Billings, Montana

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Bears Just Get A Bad Rap In Yellowstone National Park

I am fortunate to have an international tourist attraction nearly right out my back door!  Spent the week up in Yellowstone National Park with my husband and my daughter.  When in the Park, hiking the trails, only about half of the people we meet are speaking English!  Lots of visitors from all over the World, and they all seem to get alone just fine out in the woods.Grizzly Bear

Bears just get a bad rap!  Right now, there's only about 150 Grizzly Bears in Yellowstone National Park, but every-bodies scared to death of them (they are big, and you really don't want to mess with them).  I think the Ranger said there are about another 600 or so Black Bears (which can be brown) in the Park as well.  Check out this link for the best information on statistics for Bears in Yellowstone.

Since records have been kept, there's only been 5 deaths from Bears in Yellowstone National Park.  One other death in 1983 happened outside the West Entrance in the Rainbow Point Campground in the Gallatin National Forest. 

Just this past July, a Grizzly Bear Mom with 3 cubs attacked tent campers in a campground outside of Cooke City Montana, one person was killed and several others were injured.  Our hearts and prayers go out to the families involved in this terrible encounter.  The bears have since been captured and euthanized.  An investigation is underway to figure out why this happened, there is some speculation that a photographer may have been baiting the bears prior to the attack.

When these kind of headlines are in the news, bears become the evil empire of the forest.  In reality, these incidents are extremely rare! 

We did see a bear with 3 cubs in the Hayden Valley last Saturday evening.  She was doing one of those food searches where she goes back and forth in a zig zag pattern searching for maybe a baby elk?  Baby elk have no scent, so if a bear wants to find one, they need to do a strategic search.  I had to use my binoculars just to watch these Bears because they were a good 150 yds away.  The cubs were hiding in the sage brush, but every now and then, they would pop up their heads and check out the crowd of people watching them!

I would love to show you a picture of the Bears we saw, but I didn't get a good picture of them.

I did get a picture of the Teton's of Wyoming as the backdrop of a vacation pose.  This was taken just above the Jackson Lake Lodge.  Stunning!

Wanda Thomas and husband Tracy on Vacation

 

 

The Quilting Realtor

Wanda Thomas

Many Dream Of Living In Montana

I'm One of the Lucky One's That Already Do!

Wanda Thomas

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Call or Text 406-698-8640 for help with all things Montana.

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