Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Came across this opinion piece regarding the potential introduciton of the griz to the North Cascades. Has a link to an interesting report by the NW Ecosystem Alliance. Author says having griz in the Cascades would ease the recreation use pressure. Maybe. As always a big political issue.

 

http://www.tidepool.org/voices/ncgriz.cfm

  • Replies 53
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

After 5 years of remote camera work, hair snares, and interviews with folks that claimed to see the griz, WDFW concluded that there were a handful in the Cascades. Probably wander in and out of the US. A friend who just finished her Masters work in the North Cascades switched topics after two years of baited hair snare traps without any indication of griz.

Posted (edited)

I seem to remember that black bears kill significantly more people in British Columbia that do grizzlies. This is entirely a function of their far greater numbers & the occassional, highly improbable circumstance. I'm not too keen on meeting a grizzly, but I suspect that like wolves, they'll eventually re-establish themselves in Cascades without any help, other than the lack of Fed-subsidized poisoning programs & bounty hunting, which I assume was responsible for their near-disappearance. My buddy from Poland claims wolves are found in a significant part of that country-- with far less wilderness than most of Western U.S. Poland is & was desperately poor & I assume never have systematic poisoning, & I understand guns weren't permitted &/or were unaffordable. Wolves also live in much of Italy's central mountain range, though I understand they have hybridized with dogs.

Edited by johndavidjr
Posted
We saw a very large Black Bear at the end of the Cascade River Road this past Saturday. How common are sightings of them?

 

FAirly common. I've seen them on the side of the road before.

Posted

Fairly common. Good luck on your part to see one. I'd like to see a griz in NOCA. I've seen a cougar once. It was standing on the deck outside my cabin in Marblemount. I stepped out through the screen door and was then about eight feet from it. It looked at me, hopped down off the deck, and walked down through the brush along the river bank. What struck me was how small his head was in relation to his body, and how long his tail was (as long as his body). I think my best sighting, though, was a fisher in Bridge Creek. It was walking a log and was suddenly attacked by yellowjackets. Did a wild dance on that log before running off. snaf.gif

Posted

some of the canadian, cascade grizzlies wander across the border once in a while. but they don't like to stay down there for some reason.

Posted
some of the canadian, cascade grizzlies wander across the border once in a while. but they don't like to stay down there for some reason.

 

They crave peanut butter occasionally.

 

Same thing happened with cheese a few years back.

Posted

 

yelrotflmao.gifNobody ever sees a small bear.

 

We saw a very large Black Bear at the end of the Cascade River Road this past Saturday. How common are sightings of them?

 

For the record, I don't beleive there are resident Grizzlies in WA. Very rarely one may cross the border for a few days or soemthing if it's lost.

Posted
I think my best sighting, though, was a fisher in Bridge Creek.

 

I've seen pine martens myself, and I have talked to folks who've seen wolverines along Bridge Creek, but I was under the impression that the Fisher didn't live in that area. When did you see it?

Posted

very cool & pleasant to read of seeing cougar at Marblemount & fisher at Bridge Creek. I've not seen much big wildlife in Wa. outside of a couple of blk bears & elk, & a BIG hole on slope 1/3 way up Whistler/Cutthroat-- probably result of large predator (bear or cat) digging out a marmot den.

 

In New Mexico once in the Mazanos se. of Alb. I descended a small canyon at dusk & scared a large animal that was sitting six feet up in some brushy trees. I suspect it was a cougar (or maybe bkbear) but never saw it, & half-way imagine it was wondering whether to get some dinner or flee. Earlier that day a patrolling ranger pointed out bear & cougar tracks & I was only able to figure they looked similar (except cougar puke a lot, maybe even more than crap, sorta like otters do & somewhat like owls.) In Vermont, some years later, I examined blk-bear tracks moments after they were made (according to a hunter) & figured they looked pretty much like a very big dog. Griz or larger bkbr, I reckon would be more obvious.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...