Tuesday 10 July 2012

Susan Kay Anderson: Bears and Berries


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American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Lake Louise, Alberta: photo by Harvey Barrison, 5 September 2008




The Umpqua, the Rogue. The country, rugged, the water soft. There are bears here and lots of willows. The river smell enthralls, drugs.

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It is time to make red currant and raspberry jam.

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The summer bell rings in the monastery tower all over the hillside. It is time to pray that I left enough berries for the bears.








This female American Black Bear (Ursus americanus) had a small cub with her but the cub was so small it is hidden in the undergrowth. The cub was bounding around everywhere and was impossible to capture in the darkness of these woods. You can just see the top of the cub's back near the tree to the left of the mother bear. A week prior to this image being taken, the mother had two cubs, but a local ranger told us that the other cub was recently killed by a grizzly bear. The pair are fattening up on huckleberries
: photo by Alan Vernon, 18 September 2010



American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Lake Louise, Alberta: photo by Harvey Barrison, 5 September 2008


American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Lake Louise, Alberta: photo by Harvey Barrison, 5 September 2008


American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Lake Louise, Alberta: photo by Harvey Barrison, 5 September 2008

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Black Bear cub (Ursus americanus): photo by R. I. Bridges, 24 August 2005 (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)

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A brown American Black Bear cub (Ursus americanus) seen west of Boulder, Colorado: photo by Hustvedt, 28 April 2008

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American Black Bear cub (Ursus americanus): photographer unknown, n.d.; image by Kelson, 5 May 2008 (NOAA)


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Cinnamon-coloured North American Black Bear (Ursus americanus) eating dandelions in Waterton Lakes National Park, Alberta: photo by Traveler100, July 2011

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American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Mount Rainier National Park, Washington: photo by Walter Siegmund, 12 August 2008

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American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
: photo by Walter Siegmund, 12 August 2008

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North American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), crossing the James Bay Road, at the southern end of Hudson Bay, Canada. At this time of year, the bears are about to enter hibernation and are collecting as much food as possible: photo by Fenerty, 20 October 2007

9 comments:

  1. It was suddenly crowded
    in the wilderness

    that summer hiking
    down the Rogue River Trail.

    Denise and I were visited
    by our future husbands
    in the guise of Ursus americanus--
    sniffing all around the tent.
    Robert Christie, Ottmar Geitner.

    We managed to scare
    the bear
    with Sierra cups
    and shouting
    but it hid and waited
    across Whiskey Creek
    head in paws
    a dog, a god
    until we left
    so it could really
    get to know us
    at least to Blossom Bar.

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  2. Obviously you are a woman who knows how to keep a trail from becoming overcrowded. Scout lore has it that if a person is going to die on the Rogue River it will most likely be at Blossom Bar.

    But it won't be the bears did it. They'll be too busy catching fish.

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  3. (Or nibbling the azaleas.)

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  4. This is just great -- lovely, touching and generous. In Tuxedo Park, New York (the name Tuxedo is apparently a corruption of the Lenape word denoting bears and we're quite close to Bear Mountain), we see and love our bears. (Which makes us part of a minority of, say, ten.) No matter, we have those people, the bears and whatever deer and turkey are left for company. Curtis

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  5. Thank you, Susan and TC, for these words and images.

    "The river smell enthralls, drugs." We don't have a grand river in this City and the reek of the canals can be very dispiriting at times.

    I'll keep the Rogue River in my head for a while.

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  6. I've died a thousand times
    at Blossom Bar
    in the crashing sound
    of the rapids--
    their fresh mists
    cooling everything
    down just past
    Mule Creek Canyon
    and its enticing
    drops into boiling pots
    in the Rogue
    where men have lived
    hacking away at the gold
    becoming ghosts
    finally resting
    sitting with one leg
    crossed over
    the other

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  7. Bears have had a bad time over here in Hellas; once plentiful in the mountains of Northern Greece and thus easy prey for hunters and gypsies who would capture and “teach” them to “dance” for the natives, they dwindled down almost to extinction until one man—Giannis Boutaris—decided to use his money to help save them. Here’s a link to the video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UmQjCYqx2QE

    (By the way, Boutaris is now mayor of Thessaloniki, Greece’s second largest city.)

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  8. Good for you and your little company of ten plus friends, Curtis. That constitutes a community of elective affinity with life.

    WB, Susan's had the Rogue running through my head these past several weeks. My head badly needs the irrigation.

    Susan, it was curious to learn that old man Wooldridge created Blossom Bar (as currently constituted) with dynamite. Then again, perhaps that is the legendary "Way of the West"(?). (If it's in your way, blow it up.)

    Below is Vassilis's link, enabled for clicking. The history of the brutal treatment these animals have received as toys of humans is writ upon them forever. Heart-wrenching. "They are not able to go back to nature."

    Saving the Dancing Bears of Greece

    Dancing bears and "party bears" of other countries in the same part of the world have fared less well. The three remaining dancing bears of Serbia had been slated for rescue by a Bulgarian animal relief group. At the last minute the Serbian authorities refused to allow the transfer. A country in whose recent history cruelty seems endemic and general... but torturing an old, blind bear... bad advertisement for this species.

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  9. Bear, what color are you?
    A blue with white
    violet rainbow
    lumbers across
    the green landscape
    the color of a cave
    the den of intention
    dark matter
    the most important substance
    they've recently discovered
    and reported in a distracted
    manner way up close over there.

    ReplyDelete