Young black bear boar runs for freedom (National Park Service) |
At six a.m. last Thursday (the 20th) this young male black bear and his "cellmate" had some visitors: three National Park Service employees and two Colorado game wardens. The last were there to instruct the former in the fine points (heh) of darting and tranquilizing bears.
The two "boys" (subadults) came down from Rocky Mountain National Park to a rehabilitation center in southern Colorado after the East Troublesome Fire last year. They spent the winter getting fat — and somewhat bored — until finally it was time to release them in a area not so much frequented by park visitors.
One of the NPS staffers reported, "The boys were very well-behaved and calm on the trip. The release went really well — away from visitors."
The GPS-tracking collar shown is designed to come off after a time.
I would probably enjoy traveling up I-25 through Denver more if I could be tranquilized in a windowless trailer too.*
The rehabbers were curious if the two bears would pal around together for a time, but the GPS evidence said they did not.
"The bears stuck together for less than two minutes before going in separate directions. They're sub adults and their genetics are telling them to go off and find their own territories," one of the NPS stafers reported.
* Actually, bears in transit are usually recovering from the anesthesia with the aid of another drug. For one thing, it means one will not end up lying on top of the other and possibly smothering it. An exception might be if they have to be moved from the transport trailer on a sled or something, where they need to be kept quiet longer.
1 comment:
I read this morning that they caught a black bear that's been roaming out on the eastern plains--from Ellicott to Hugo and Limon, they caught it near Calhan.
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