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  By Enos A. Mills

     THE GRIZZLY, OUR GREATEST WILD ANIMAL. Illustrated.
     YOUR NATIONAL PARKS. Illustrated.
     THE STORY OF SCOTCH. Illustrated.
     THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN WONDERLAND. Illustrated.
     THE STORY OF A THOUSAND-YEAR PINE. Illustrated.
     IN BEAVER WORLD. Illustrated.
     THE SPELL OF THE ROCKIES. Illustrated.
     WILD LIFE ON THE ROCKIES. Illustrated.


  HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY Boston and New York




  The Grizzly

  OUR GREATEST WILD ANIMAL


  [Illustration: A WILD GRIZZLY
    _Taken by Flashlight_
    _Copyright, 1902, by F. C. Wolcott_]




  The Grizzly

  OUR GREATEST WILD ANIMAL

  By
  Enos A. Mills

  With Illustrations

  [Illustration]

  Boston and New York
  Houghton Mifflin Company
  The Riverside Press Cambridge
  1919




  COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY ENOS A. MILLS

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED




  To
  Emerson McMillin




Preface


It would make exciting reading if a forty-year-old grizzly bear were to
write his autobiography. Beginning with the stories from his mother of
the long and exciting journey of his ancestors from far-off Asia and of
her own struggle in bringing up her family, and then telling of his own
adventurous life and his meetings with men and with other animals, he
could give us a book of highly dramatic quality. Just what a wise old
grizzly would say while philosophizing concerning the white race would
certainly be of human interest and rich in material for literature.

A vigorous, courageous adventurer himself, and a keen and constant
observer, the grizzly would have clear-cut views concerning the
explorers, early settlers, and hunters. The arrival of the early white
people aroused his extraordinary inherent curiosity. He watched them
with wondering eyes. He was even inclined to walk right into camp to
make their acquaintance. He had no evil intentions, but he was greeted
with yells and bullets. Relentlessly down through the years he was
pursued. Dogs, guns, poison, and traps have swept a majority of the
grizzlies away. Their retreat was masterly and heroic, but the odds were
overwhelming.

In the midst of this terrible hunt the Yellowstone wild-life reservation
was established. Instantly the grizzly understood, years before other
big animals did, and in its protection at once came forth from hiding,
eager to be friendly with man. I should like to know his wonderings
concerning this place of refuge--why its creation, why its mysterious,
invisible boundary-lines, and why, outside of it, the fierce,
never-ending pursuit for him has still gone on, until his noble species
is verging on extinction.

What, too, are his feelings over the increased friendly interest in his
species all over the nation? How excitedly must he catch the echoes of
discussions which are telling that he has been misunderstood, that he is
not a bad fellow! And surely, if writing, he will pause abruptly when he
hears that the public, and even the hunter, is making efforts to have
the hunt for him checked--learns that there may early be a close season
on the grizzly bear.

       *       *       *       *       *

During the past thirty years I have had numerous experiences with the
grizzly bear in various sections of his territory. In it I have camped
alone and unarmed. I have trailed the grizzly without a gun. I have
repeatedly been outwitted by him, but never has he attacked me. I have
not found him ferocious, and I consider him in most respects the
greatest animal on the North American continent, if not in the world. He
excels in mental development and physical prowess, and he possesses the
rare quality of loyalty. He is full of curiosity and is a born
adventurer. The species impresses one with its superiority, and the
individuality of each grizzly ever stands out.

The material in this book is drawn chiefly from my own experiences with
grizzly bears in the wilderness. Ten of the chapters have not before
appeared in print. The author acknowledges with thanks the courtesy of
the editors of the _Saturday Evening Post_ in granting permission to
reprint from that magazine parts of three chapters contained in this
book; and to the editors of _The American Boy_ for two chapters
reprinted herein. Dr. C. Hart Merriam has kindly consented to the
reproduction of a part of his comment on the grizzly and big brown
bears, together with his up-to-date classification of them. This
valuable material represents the work of years.

E. A. M.




Contents


  Grizzly Sagacity                                          1
  Cubs and Mother                                          21
  His Exclusive Territory                                  41
  Making a Bear Living                                     61
  The Long Winter Sleep                                    79
  Being Good to Bears                                      99
  Trailing without a Gun                                  117
  When the Grizzly Plays                                  137
  Matching Wits with the Grizzly                          153
  Where Curiosity Wins                                    173
  On the Defensive                                        189
  Man's Loyal Companion                                   209
  New Environments                                        227
  Description, History, and Classification                245
  Will the Grizzly be Exterminated?                       271
  Index                                                   285




Illustrations


  A Wild Grizzly                               _Frontispiece_
    _From a Flashlight Photograph by F. C. Wolcott_

  The Challenge (showing a young Alaskan Grizzly
  of the Big Brown Bear Type)                              24
    _Photograph by Pedersen, Seward, Alaska_

  Mexican Grizzlies: Group in the Field Columbian
  Museum, Chicago                                          64
    _Reproduced by courtesy of the Museum_

  Jenny and Johnny, in the First Year of their Lives      102
    _Photograph by the Author_

  Jenny and Johnny, at the Age of Fourteen                114
    _Photograph taken in the Denver Zoo_

  Catching Black Bear Cubs                                140

  Johnny                                                  176
    _Photograph by J. D. Figgins_

  A Black Bear in the Sequoia National Park               212
    _Photograph by Lindley Eddy, Giant Forest, Cal._

  A Black Bear and Cubs                                   232
    _Photograph by C. E. Huish, Eureka, Utah_

  Grizzly Bear Group in Colorado Museum of Natural
  History, Denver                                         250
    _Reproduced by courtesy of the Museum_




Grizzly Sagacity


One autumn day, while I was watching a little cony stacking hay for the
winter, a clinking and rattling of slide rock caught my attention. On
the mountain-side opposite me, perhaps a hundred yards away, a grizzly
bear was digging in an enormous rock-slide. He worked energetically.
Several slabs of rock were hurled out of the hole and tossed down the
mountain-side. Stones were thrown right and left. I could not make out
what he was after, but it is likely that he was digging for a woodchuck.

After a short time only his shoulders showed above the scattered slide
rock as he stood erect. Then he began piling the stones upon the edge of
his deepening hole. The slope was steep and the stones had to be placed
with care to prevent their tumbling back. After lifting into place one
huge slab, he stood and looked at it for an instant and then slightly
changed its position. On top of this stone he piled another large one,
eyed it closely, shook it to see if it was solid, and finally shifted
it a trifle. Had he not been wearing a grizzly-bear coat, it would have
been easy to believe that a powerful, careful, thoughtful man was
eagerly digging that hole.

The keenness of the grizzly's sagacity and the workings of his rare wit
were impressed upon me in a photographing experience that I had. Two
other young fellows and I thought we could get a near-by photograph of
an old grizzly that ranged near us. We entered his territory at three
widely separated places and moved in concert toward the centre. We hoped
that either one of us would be able to slip up close to the grizzly or
else he, in running away, would come close to one of us.

Very soon one of the boys aroused the bear and started him running. The
grizzly had evidently scented him half a mile away. Running in my
direction, when within about a mile he discovered my presence, turned,
and retreated six or seven miles into a remote corner of his territory.
In this retreat he did not go within two miles of either of the other
fellows.

Realizing that the bear had eluded us, we slightly separated and moved
toward him. He did not wait to be cornered in a cañon. Late that day we
followed his devious tracks and discovered his movements. We learned to
our chagrin that he had doubled back in the cañon and come part way
toward us. Then, climbing an out-thrusting ridge where he could see in
all directions, he evidently had watched us when we passed up a grassy
valley beneath him. After we were in the timber beyond he had descended
to the valley. Then the most amazing turn came. Instead of running away
in the opposite direction he had followed along close behind us! By the
time we discovered all this the day was gone, and so was the bear. He
had had an adventure.

Did the grizzly know we were unarmed? He might have used the same
tactics in any case. Anyway, he easily kept out of our way, followed our
moves, and had, perhaps, enjoyed our unsuccessful efforts.

I would give the grizzly first place in the animal world for
brain-power. He is superior in mentality to the horse, the dog, and even
the gray wolf. Instinct the grizzly has, but he also has the ability to
reason. His ever-alert, amazingly developed senses are constantly
supplying his brain with information--information which he uses, and
uses intelligently. His powers of scent are exquisite. His ears hear
faint sounds; they are continually on scout and sentinel duty. Wireless
messages from long distances which his senses pick up are accurately
received and their place of origin correctly determined.

The grizzly appears to guide his daily life with plan and forethought.
He has the genius for taking pains. He is constantly alert and meets
emergencies with brains. The following actions have impressed me with
his keen mental processes.

A grizzly cub in Yellowstone Park found a big ham skin--a prized
delicacy. Just as the little fellow was lifting it to his mouth a big
bear appeared. He instantly dropped the ham skin, sat down on it, and
pretended to be greatly interested in watching something in the edge of
the woods.

Another young grizzly in the Yellowstone one day found a tin can that
was open at one end and partly filled with fish. He raised it in his
fore paws and peeped in, then deliberately turned the can upside down
and shook it. Nothing came out. He shook again; no result. Then he
proceeded just about as you or I might have done. He placed the can on
the ground, open end down, and hammered the bottom of the can with a
stone until the fish dropped out.

In a zoo one day, a piece of hard-tack that a grizzly bear wanted fell
into the hands of a black bear. The black bear dipped the hard-tack in
the water and then started to take a bite. Evidently it was too hard. He
put it in the water again, and while it soaked gave his attention to
something else. While the black bear was not looking, the grizzly,
standing on the farther edge of the pool, stirred the water with a fore
paw and started the hard-tack toward him on the waves. The instant the
first wave touched the black bear he looked around, grabbed the precious
hard-tack, which was rapidly floating away, and, pushing it to the
bottom of the pool, put one hind foot upon it. How very like the mental
processes of human beings!

One day in North Park, Colorado, I came upon the carcass of a cow that
wolves had recently killed. It lay in a grassy opening surrounded by
willow clumps. Knowing that bears were about, I climbed into the
substantial top of a stocky pine near by, hoping that one would come to
feast. A grizzly came at sundown.

When about one hundred feet from the carcass the bear stopped. Standing
erect, with fore paws hanging loosely, he looked, listened, and
carefully examined the air with his nose. The grizzly is eternally
vigilant; he appears to feel that he is ever pursued. As the air was not
stirring, I felt that he could not scent me in my tree-top perch. It may
be, however, that he faintly caught my lingering scent where I had
walked round the opening. After scouting for a minute or two with all
his keen senses, he dropped on all fours and slowly, without a sound,
advanced toward the willow clumps.

In places of possible ambush the grizzly is extremely cautious. He is
not a coward, but he does not propose to blunder into trouble. When
within thirty feet of the waiting feast this bear redoubled his
precautions against surprise and ambush by walking round the carcass.
Then, slipping stealthily to the edge of a thick willow clump, he flung
himself into it with a fearful roar, instantly leaping out on the other
side ready to charge anything that might start from the willows; but
nothing started. Standing erect, tense in every muscle, he waited a
moment in expectant attitude. Then he charged, roaring, through another
willow clump, and another, until he had investigated every possible
place of concealment near the carcass. Not finding an enemy, he at last
went to the carcass.

When he had feasted for a few minutes he suddenly rose, snarled, and
sniffed along my trail for a few yards. He uttered a few growling
threats. That a grizzly cannot climb a tree is a fact in natural history
which gave me immense satisfaction. But the bear returned to the carcass
and finished his feast. Finally, having raked grass and trash over the
remains, he doubled back on his trail and faded into the twilight.

Grizzlies often show courage and strategy by hiding and lying in ambush
for a pursuing hunter. On one occasion I had been following a grizzly
for a number of days, trying to get his photograph at short range. He
knew I was in pursuit. Finally, he doubled back on his trail a short
distance and crouched behind a log. His tracks as I followed them passed
along the other side of this log, and continued plainly ahead of me
across the top of a snow-covered moraine. But as I approached the log,
the wind stirred the bear's fur and gave me warning.

A grizzly appears to understand that his tracks reveal his movements. I
was once following one that had been wounded by a hunter to see where
he went and what he did. He circled from his trail and came back to it
over logs and rocks, which left no markings, and hid in a clump of fir
trees. On seeing this possible place of ambush by the trail, I turned
aside and climbed a pine to reconnoitre. When the bear realized that I
had discovered him, he made off in anger.

Round the foot of Long's Peak I followed a bear through a shallow snow,
hoping to overtake and photograph him. Most of the snow had melted off
the logs and bowlders. After trailing him four or five miles I came to a
bowlder where he had climbed up and looked around. Possibly he wished to
see how close I was to him; possibly he was deciding just where he would
carry out a plan for outwitting me. At any rate, he jumped from the
bowlder, walked round it, traveled a short distance slowly, then set off
on a run, going east. After I had followed his trail for more than a
mile, his tracks ceased in a rocky, snowless area where his footprints
did not show.

I thought I should find his tracks in the snow on the farther edge of
the rocky space; but they were not there. Then, in the snow, I went
entirely round the edge of the rocky space without seeing a track.
Thinking that possibly the grizzly was hiding in this small rocky area,
I at once cautiously circled every place behind which he might be
concealed, but without finding him.

Out in the snow I made a larger circle and at last discovered his
tracks. Entering the rocky space, he had turned abruptly to the left and
traveled about one hundred feet. Then, from the rocks, he had made a
long leap into a clump of bushes, from this leaped into another clump of
bushes, and finally into the snow. He thus left the rocky place without
leaving any telltale tracks within thirty feet of it.

He started westward--back toward the bowlder--alongside his first trail,
and traveled for about a mile parallel to it and less than one hundred
feet from it. Near the bowlder he waited in concealment at a point where
he could watch his former trail, and evidently stayed there until I
passed.

Then he traveled on a short distance to another small rocky area.
Doubling in his tracks, he came back for one hundred feet or so in the
trail he had thus made. Working toward his first trail, he hid his
tracks by leaping among fallen timbers and bushes, and at last made a
leap into his first trail by the bowlder, where he made many tracks in
the snow. Along this old trail he traveled east again a short distance,
stepping precisely in his former footprints.

Out of this trail he leaped upon the top of a low, snowless bowlder on
the right, and from this upon another bowlder. He walked along a bare
fallen log. Here I must have searched more than two hours before
detecting two or three broken sticks, which gave me a clew to the
direction he had taken. From the log he walked upon a cross log and then
plunged through fifty or sixty feet of thicket which showed no trail.
From where he had emerged on the farther side of the thicket there was
little by which to trace him for the next quarter of a mile. He
zigzagged over fallen logs and leaped upon snowless bowlders until he
came to a tree leaning against a cliff. Up this tree he walked to a
ledge, where, fortunately, there was a little snow which recorded his
track. He followed the ledge to the top of the cliff and, leaving this,
ran for four or five miles. It took me twenty-four hours to unravel the
various tangles, and I finally gave up the idea of photographing him.
Long before I arrived at the top of the cliff I had concluded that I was
following a reasoning animal, one who might be more alert than I myself.

Though a grizzly has both speed and strength, he generally uses his wits
and thus obtains the desired end in the easiest way. Three or four
persons have told me that they have seen instances of a grizzly bear's
taking the part of an acrobat. The bear, by this means, endeavored to
attract the attention of cattle, with the idea of drawing them close and
seizing one of them. Among his pranks he turned an occasional
somersault, rolled over and over, and chased his tail.

A Utah grizzly killed about one thousand head of cattle in fifteen
years. During this time there was a large reward offered for his death.
Numerous attempts were made to capture him. Old hunters and trappers
tried with rifles and traps; expeditions of men, horses, and dogs
pursued him. All these years he lived on as usual in his home territory,
made a kill every few days, and was seen only two or three times.

Another grizzly, eluding pursuers, slaughtered live stock freely, and
managed to survive thirty-five years of concerted efforts to kill or
capture him. There was a rich reward on his head.

There are similar accounts of Clubfoot, Three-Toes, and other outlaw
grizzlies. All of these bears slaughtered cattle by the hundreds in
their home territory, lived with heavy prices on their heads, and for
years outwitted skillful hunters and trappers, escaping the
well-organized posse again and again. Knowing many of the hunters and
their skillful methods, and the repeated triumphs of other grizzlies
over combinations and new contrivances, I am convinced that the grizzly
bear is an animal who reasons.

When in a trap or cornered, a wounded grizzly sometimes feigns death.
Apparently he considers his situation desperate and sees in this method
the possibility of throwing his assailant off guard. Considering that
need of feigning death is recent,--since the arrival of the white man
with high-power rifle and insidious steel trap,--this strategy appears
like a clear case of reasoning.

The grizzly is difficult to anticipate. His strategy usually defeats the
hunter. One wounded bear may at once charge the hunter; the next may run
from him; and the third may hold the ground defiantly. The grizzly
meets what to us seem identical situations in unlike manner, and makes
sudden changes in his habits without our seeing the cause for such
changes. Quickly he makes the acquaintance of the new and promptly
adjusts himself to it. If it is dangerous he avoids it, if advantageous
he uses it.

Often in traveling to a distant place the grizzly goes on the run, but
just as often he goes at slower speed. If plodding slowly, he conveys
the impression of deliberating. He often appears to be thinking, and
probably is. Though shuffling along, he is bound for a definite place
with the intention of doing a definite thing. Suddenly he changes his
mind and goes off in the opposite direction.

I have seen a bear hustling along, with his mind apparently made up; he
is in a hurry to carry out some plan, to reach a given place, or see
some particular thing. All at once he notices where he is and stops. He
remembers that he intended to look at such and such a thing on the way
but has neglected to do so. He hesitates a few moments, then goes back.

On rare occasions the grizzly walks along, perhaps in bountiful summer,
thinking of nothing in particular, with head swinging slowly from side
to side. Something arouses him; he may promptly retreat or he may
investigate. You never know what a grizzly will do next or how he will
do it, but everything he does is with fresh interest and delightful
individuality.

An old grizzly pursued by wolves once gave me a fearful exhibition of
nature. He came running across an opening in the southern end of North
Park with several wolves close in pursuit. He acted as though away from
home--hard pressed, bewildered, and in a strange territory. The wolves
were crowding him closely as he reached the edge of the woods. With a
sudden move he wheeled and struck at the one in the lead. Instantly the
others were around him, snarling and snapping. The grizzly wheeled and
struck quickly to right and left, striking outward and downward somewhat
after the fashion of a cat striking at a near-by object. Then he turned
and ran on.

A few miles farther on he again crossed an opening. Fresh wolves were
now in pursuit. I saw several of the pack lying down, panting and
resting. The grizzly had no rest, he was hard pressed. At one place,
closely crowded, he backed up in the corner of a cliff and here put up
such a fight that he drove the wolves off for the time being. He killed
one and badly injured two of them. Towards evening he took refuge in a
denlike place for which he evidently had been heading. The following
morning a number of the wolves were gone, but the others were waiting
for the grizzly in front of the den.

A grizzly with three feet managed to maintain himself in a territory
near my home, and I twice heard of his outwitting hunters and their
hounds. The territory was occasionally invaded by trappers but he
avoided their snares. Hunters with dogs finally drove him off his
domain. Where he went, what struggles he had, what masterly retreats he
made, what troubles he had in making a living, and what his final tragic
end, I do not know. That he survived so long with one foot gone
indicates that he was a bear of powers, a bear with a career, whose
biography or autobiography would be full of action and adventure.

It cannot be stated too strongly that the grizzly is not a coward. Every
drop of blood in his body is courageous. He has no fear. He is
intelligent enough to know that man is a dangerous enemy--that it is
almost suicidal for a bear to expose himself to man. There is no animal
of the wilds whom he avoids. Man, with field-glasses, dogs, and a rifle
that will kill at the distance of a mile, are odds too great for him. He
wisely endeavors to avoid man, but if he cannot do so, when the fight
comes he exhibits one hundred per cent of courage and efficiency.

Only a few generations ago the grizzly was instinctively courageous,
never avoiding a foe; with courage he met every issue, almost invariably
coming out triumphant. But when man is the issue, the grizzly, seeing
more than one move ahead, has the wisdom and the greater courage to
suppress the old instinctive trait, for its use would be ineffective.

For years I have watched, studied, and enjoyed the grizzly, have seen
his actions under a variety of influences--fighting and playing,
sleeping and food-getting. I have watched him when he was under normal
influences and abnormal ones; when pursuer and when pursued; have kept
him within the focus of my field-glasses for hours at a time, and have
trailed for days with a camera this master animal.

The grizzly is so dignified and so strangely human-like that I have felt
degraded every time I have seen him pursued with dogs. A few times I
have outwitted him; more often he has outwitted me. We have occasionally
met unexpectedly; sometimes each stared without alarm, and at other
times each fled in an opposite direction. Sometimes the grizzly is
guided by instinct, but more often his actions are triumphantly directed
by reason.




Cubs and Mother


The life-story of every bear is a story of adventure. A hunter with whom
I was camping in the No-Summer Mountains of Colorado came in one June
evening with the report that he had killed a mother grizzly. He had
searched for her cubs, which he thought must be near by, but had failed
to discover them. The hunter said he had come upon her unexpectedly in a
thicket and she had at once charged, probably thinking herself cornered.
One well-aimed shot in the head had dropped her.

The following morning I went with the hunter to bring in the grizzly.
She was a beautiful silver-tip of about four hundred pounds. We made
another thorough search for the cubs without finding them. Just as the
hunter was about to start skinning the bear I caught sight of a cub
peeping from beneath large slide rocks not thirty feet away. Then
another frightened cub face appeared.

After hesitating for a moment both cubs came out and stood looking
intently toward us and their dead mother. After a stare, as we did not
move, they took a few steps toward us. Hesitating again, they stopped,
rose up and looked around, and then hastily retreated to the rocks.
Evidently their mother had trained them to stay wherever she left them
until she returned.

But they had waited long. For a while they stood and whimpered very much
like hungry, forsaken children. They could scent their mother, and see
her, too, and were too hungry and lonesome to endure without her longer.
Again they started slowly toward us, walking closely side by side. When
very near they paused, rose on hind legs, and looked intently at us and
in wonder and longing at their lifeless mother. Then they went to her.
One little cub sniffed in a bewildered, puzzled way over her cold, still
body. He gently stroked her fur with his paw and then sat down and began
to whimper and cry.

  [Illustration: THE CHALLENGE
    _The Cub on the Right is an Alaskan Grizzly of the Big Brown
    Bear Type_]

The other little cub stood looking with awe into his mother's moveless
face, but at last shook off his fright and smelled her bloody head.
Then, all forlorn, he turned to look eagerly into the face of the
hunter, who had been watching the little cub all this while with big
tears upon his cheeks. After a moment he took a step toward him, rose
up, and trustingly put fore paws upon his knee, looking seriously,
confidingly into his face. We carried these little orphans to camp, and
the hunter raised them. Their mother was the last animal that he ever
shot.

The cubs are born in the hibernating cave in January, February, or
March, probably the majority in February. The number at birth commonly
is two, but sometimes there are three and occasionally even four. Each
is about the size of a chipmunk, weighing from ten to twenty ounces.

Generally the mother does not come forth for either food or drink for
some weeks after the cubs are born. She stays in the den a month longer
than bears without cubs. Curled around the little bears in the den, she
nourishes them from her store of fat. The cubs grow slowly, and on
leaving the den are often only a trifle larger than a cotton-tail
rabbit, weighing from ten to fifteen pounds. The grizzly appears to give
birth to cubs only every second year. Though yearlings have been seen
with a mother and cubs, it is likely that they did not belong to her.

In proportion to the size of the mother, the grizzly is one of the
smallest of animals at birth, weighing about one fifth of one per cent
of her weight. A baby kangaroo at birth is even smaller proportionally,
however, and is said to weigh less than one tenth of one per cent of the
mother's weight. A baby blue whale is about four per cent of the weight
of the mother and sometimes weighs three tons and has a length of
twenty-five feet.

Why is the young grizzly so small? It will readily be seen that while
hibernating, neither eating nor drinking for a few months, the mother
grizzly would not be able to nourish two or more very lusty youngsters.
It is probable that in the process of evolution Nature selected the
small grizzly cubs to perpetuate the species.

While visiting the Blackfeet Indians in western Montana one February, I
saw a young Indian woman nursing two baby grizzly bears. The mother
grizzly had been killed a day or two before and the cubs taken from the
den. They were little bits of warm, pink life, scantily covered with
hair. Each weighed not more than one pound. They were blind and
toothless, but had sharp tiny claws. They had their eyes open in about
fourteen days, and early began to cut their teeth. For several days the
Indian woman suckled the cubs, then she fed them on cow's milk and
succeeded in raising them.

Many are the colors of grizzlies. I once saw a mother with four cubs,
each of a different color. She herself was cream-colored, but one of the
cubs was nearly black, another gray, the third brown, and the fourth
black and white. A grizzly may be a blond, or a brunette, or one of half
a dozen in-between shades. Often, as he ages, he becomes a "silver-tip."
Probably dark gray is the prevailing color.

From the time the mother and cubs emerge from the winter den in the
spring until they enter a den to hibernate the next winter, they are on
the move much of the time. Only occasionally does the old bear leave the
cubs behind, and this as a rule is not for long. She is constantly
watchful for their safety and makes haste to place herself between the
cubs and any possible danger. In retreating she usually leads the way,
the cubs following closely, but if nearly cornered she is likely to act
as rear guard.

Crossing the mountains one stormy spring day, I paused in a whirl of
mist and wet snow to look for the trail. Peering ahead, I beheld a
grizzly bear emerging from the gloom only a few yards away. Close
behind her were two small cubs. Mother Grizzly, as much surprised as I,
instantly retreated. With an impatient expression and a growl of anger
she wheeled quickly about and boxed the cubs right and left like a
nervous mother. Urged on with spanks from behind, the youngsters turned
back in the direction they had come from, and all vanished in the
falling snow.

Though gentle and patient, the grizzly mother uses a limited amount of
cuffing and spanking with the cubs, especially if they are in danger.
One day from far across a cañon I was watching two cubs walking along a
wild-life trail in front of their mother, when a pack outfit appeared on
my side of the cañon. The mother and the cubs saw it, and she at once
turned up a gulch, pushing the cubs before her. But the youngsters were
interested in the pack-animals and, standing still, forgot everything in
their eager watching. The mother went from one to the other, pushing
them forward. The instant she left one, the cub stopped and turned to
look back in eager curiosity at the strange sight across the cañon.
Without any show of temper the mother pushed one ahead a few yards and
then returned to the other and urged it forward.

The mother protects her cubs at any cost. Many a grizzly mother has died
in defense of her offspring, and I do not know of an instance of a
mother's running away when her cubs were exposed to danger.

At Grand Lake, Colorado, one June day, I went with a trapper on his
rounds, thinking that he might have trapped a grizzly. He had a cub
trapped by a fore paw. As we approached the spot, I chanced to climb
over a pile of fallen timber and from the top of this I saw Mother
Grizzly lying in wait a short distance in front of the cub. She had dug
out a place behind a log and was lying there concealed, unmistakably
waiting for the trapper.

One morning late in May, while I stood behind a tree watching two young
beaver at play in the pond, a small grizzly cub, of the same brown color
as the beaver, walked out to the end of a log that lay partly in the
water. He was interested in the beaver. Reaching down, he touched the
water with right fore paw, whimpered, but hesitated about going in.
While he stood looking trustingly at them, the beaver, who had been
watching him, dived into the pond.

Cubs as well as human children sometimes become separated and lost from
even the most watchful of mothers. This little cub was so thin and weak
that he must have been lost for some days. In the woods a trace of snow
that had fallen a day or two before still lingered. This enabled me to
back-track the cub to where he had probably spent a part of the night,
about a quarter of a mile up stream from the pond. His tracks showed
that he had wandered much.

If I left the cub in the woods it appeared improbable that his mother
would find him before he starved, and it was unlikely that I should find
her, even though I continued the dangerous business of searching for
her. I caught the cub without effort, and, after a few feeble attempts
to scratch and bite me, he calmed down, licked my hand, and then began
to suck a raisin which I handed him from my pocket. He was a tiny little
fellow and could not have weighed more than nine or ten pounds. I
carried him to the nearest ranch. The children were glad to have him,
and a letter from them some months afterwards told me that "Maverick"
was happy in his new home.

From a tree-top perch I once had a good glimpse of bear life, as a
mother grizzly with two young cubs stopped by a tree to dig out mice.
In the midst of her digging mother grizzly caught a faint scent of me
and instantly was all concentration. On tiptoe, motionless as a statue,
she stood looking, listening, and gathering information with her
nostrils. Then she relaxed, dropped on all fours, and for a moment
seemed uncertain as to her next move. One of the cubs concluded to
suckle. Instantly the mother knocked him headlong with a side swing of
her left fore paw. Such thoughtlessness in the face of possible danger
was evidently too much to be excused.

The little cub landed some yards away, tumbling heels over head. He
showed no surprise, in fact pretended that this was a part of his plan.
The instant he rolled on his feet he sniffed the earth eagerly as though
he had made a remarkable discovery and started to dig. Without
uncovering a thing he presently raced away to overtake mother and the
other cub.

Cubs appear to depend upon mother's milk until they are about six months
of age. Before this time they may eat a little solid food now and then,
but this is done more out of curiosity and in imitation of mother than
from desire. It is likely to be July before they do even this and late
August before they eat solid things with any regularity. They are not
likely to be weaned until just before denning-up time. The Indians in
Alaska told me that sometimes the cubs are not weaned until the second
autumn of their lives. This certainly is sometimes true, but I think it
peculiar to Alaska.

Comical and cunning the cubs appear as they mimic the mother. When she
stands up with fore paws against her breast, looking intently into the
distance, the cubs stand up with their paws upon their breasts and look
in the same direction. When mother turns or sniffs, these cunning little
imitators also turn and sniff. The cubs walk up to a spot where the
mother has been sniffing and digging and there sniff and dig. If mother
continues digging rather long, they find a place of their own and dig.
If mother reaches up and pulls down a fruit-laden limb and takes a bite,
they too must pull down a twig of some kind and at least look at it.

Around the shores of Chickadee Pond a mother grizzly and her two cubs
spent a July day digging out grass roots, willow roots, and probably
also grubs. I watched them for hours. Occasionally one took a mouthful
of grass or a bite of blue mertensia. After a while mother waded into
the pond; cubs of course followed.

The large yellow pond-lilies were in bloom, and mother went about biting
off stalk after stalk, apparently forgetting the cubs. One of them
grabbed a lily stem and bit two or three times without cutting it.
Finally, leaning back, he pulled it apart. He chewed it a little but
didn't seem to enjoy it. Then, holding the lily in one paw, he thrust
the great golden bulb into his mouth and ate it with apparent
satisfaction. The other little cub after much tugging finally uprooted a
lily. He chewed at the four-foot stalk in three or four places. Then,
taking the bulb in both fore paws, he ate it as though it were an apple.

It is ever a joy to watch a grizzly and her children. A mother grizzly
crossing a lake just south of Long's Peak swam low in the water with a
cub sitting contentedly on her back. She came directly towards the shore
where I was standing concealed behind trees. As she approached I threw a
stone into the water close to her. Wheeling about like lightning, Mother
Grizzly started at full speed for the farther shore. The cub tipped over
in the water, but hastily took a tail-hold and was towed rapidly away.

I once saw a grizzly and cub walking leisurely along the top of a ridge
above timber-line, the cub with long strides following in mother's
footprints. There were perhaps six or more inches of snow. I sat still.
They were coming almost towards me. Watching carefully with my glass, I
noticed that the cub was limping. He suddenly sat down and bawled. The
mother, after walking on several steps, turned to look at the cub, who
was holding his hind foot between his fore paws and examining his hurt.
I heard him whimper two or three times, and finally mother went back.
She looked down at the bottom of the foot rather indifferently, then
turned and walked on. The cub followed after.

When they passed near me the mother rose suddenly on hind legs, stood
with fore paws held against her chest, and looked and looked, and
sniffed and sniffed. Little cub, forgetting his sore hind foot, stood up
with little paws against his breast, stretched his neck, looked, and
sniffed--a perfect little imitation of the mother. She moved off several
steps and stopped on the very edge of a precipitous ridge to scout. The
cub placed his fore paws against mother's side and from this secure
position peeped over and beyond her. But they did not detect me and soon
went leisurely on.

Two miles farther I crept as close as I could and paused to watch. The
mother was digging, the cub watching eagerly. As her digging continued
for some time, he moved away, sniffed two or three times, and then began
digging rapidly on his own account. While both were digging, there was a
whir of wings and a sweep of shadows, and a flock of white ptarmigan
alighted among broken ledges near by. While I was watching them, a flock
of mountain sheep came along the out-thrusting ridge and paused to play
for a few moments on the sky-line. In pairs they faced, then reared up
and sparred with their horns; they cut lively circles around one
another. A rugged, snowy peak loomed grim behind the scene, and the
dense forest spread away for miles below. The bears, the ptarmigan, and
the sheep, the white peak, the purple forest, and the blue sky gave me a
striking experience and left a splendid picture. As I turned to go, the
cub was giving all his attention to the play of the sheep.

The almost continual play of the cubs is a never-ending source of
interest. They race, they wrestle, they box, and they play hide and
seek with utmost enthusiasm. They climb upon mother's back, they swat
and pummel her and maul her. She will endure this by the hour with
absolute indifference. Mother sometimes plays with the cubs but more
often lets them play with her, or, unconcerned, simply watches them in
their scrambles.

Playing cubs are strikingly boylike in their ways. They tumble and roll
about with lively energy. Their boxing is a ludicrously earnest show.
Standing up they clinch, struggle, break away and watch for a new
advantage. They strike first with one paw, then with the other, then
with both at once. They come close, dodge, and jump back; they hold one
paw high and the other low; sometimes they guard the face with one arm
while striking with the other. Often they strike wildly, evidently
intending to miss; they bristle up, growl, and have great fun,
pretending to be more in earnest and terrible than they really are.

No two boys ever had more excitement and fun swimming in a river than
did two cub bears whom I once watched. These cubs raced, splashed, and
pushed one another under the water. They dived and swam beneath the
surface and from a bowlder plunged into it with terrific splashes,
sometimes forward, sometimes backward.

One of the happiest incidents which I have seen in the grizzly bear
world was a mother grizzly who had discovered some honey in a standing
dead tree, perhaps five or six feet above the ground. Tearing open the
edges of the hole, she helped herself to a quantity of the honey, then
called her two cubs, who were playing a short distance away. They needed
no second invitation when they saw mother standing on hind legs and
leaning forward with fore paws against the trunk of the tree. Up the
incline of her back they raced merrily, and, standing upon mother's
head, they ate with eagerness this wonderful feast of honey.

The cubs den up with their mother the winter following their birth. The
mother is their companion until they are a year and a half old,
sometimes longer. During their second summer she commonly leaves the
cub--or cubs, as the case may be--to make their way in the world alone.
Once the family ties are broken, the grizzly is seldom seen with other
bears.

If two, three, or four in number, the yearlings run together another
year, and are chummy and inseparable. One becomes the leader and is
followed faithfully. If trouble arises, they are united and devoted
little people. To kill or injure one of the youngsters means that a
hunter is promptly charged by the others, and often killed or injured.

The cubs are great ramblers. They may wander through unoccupied regions
and over the territory of other bears. They are not considered intruders
by other bears. There are numerous interesting incidents in the
companionship of these year-olds, and sometimes of two-year-olds, who
have explored miles of territory, chased animals, played, and enjoyed
themselves together, and in moments of danger united and fought the
enemy. Yearling bears den up together the second winter and occasionally
also the third winter. Generally, however, after the second winter, that
is to say, when two and a half years old, they separate. From this time
on the grizzly lives alone.

Where does he make his first home? Sometimes the young grizzly crowds
into the territory adjoining his birthplace, but at other times he must
wander far away to find territory not already occupied. In the past,
when grizzlies were numerous, the increased population each year must
have compelled readjustments and forced a reduction of the area claimed
by each individual. But in these times, except perhaps in two or three
National Parks, there are thousands of square miles here and there over
the West without a grizzly on them. But the grizzly is fond of his home
territory, and in it, except for occasional visits into the outside
world, he spends his life.




His Exclusive Territory


A mother grizzly and her year-and-a-half-old cub came shuffling along
the shore of a little lake in the No-Summer Mountains. Where a brook
flowed into the lake she stopped, looked at the cub, and possibly
grunted something to him. She may have said, "Here, Johnny, is a
territory not claimed by other bears; this is to be your domain." I
watched him as she went ambling away alone. He stood looking at the
ground for several seconds, then turned to see his mother in the
distance, and finally surveyed his surroundings. Pushed off into the
world to shift for himself, the cub walked up the mountain-side and
disappeared in the woods.

I had seen this cub and his mother on the other side of the Medicine Bow
Mountains, at least fifty miles away. When I saw her leaving the cub to
make his way alone, I wanted to ask, "Is it common for a mother grizzly
to take her children to the territory that is to be their home?" The
selection of this domain may sometimes be made by the mother but most
often, probably, it is made by the cubs.

But, selection of the home territory aside, the grizzly leads a solitary
life; he lives apart from other bears, has his thought, his work, his
recreation, and his play by himself. Alone he hunts for food, alone he
wanders for adventure. Singly he fights his foes, and in solitude he
dens up in winter. A possible explanation of this may lie in the fact
that being alone is an advantage to an animal of his size and enormous
food-requirements. Then, too, since the advent of the white man with the
long-range rifle, it is an advantage to act singly. The grizzly's
solitary habit may be one which is an advantage in the perpetuation of
the species. Only twice have I known of father, mother, and cubs being
seen together, and I have never heard of their denning together.

A grizzly has his own home territory. He claims the exclusive use of
certain lands. In only one instance have I known two companion grizzlies
to occupy the same region permanently. These two were often seen eating,
traveling, and resting near each other. Though the grizzly wanders off
the home territory for an occasional visit, in it through the seasons
and through the years he makes his living; he defends it against
invaders, and in it he commonly dies.

Most wild creatures have their home territories, areas which they claim
the right to use to the exclusion of others of the same species. The
bear is likely to hold more territory than any other kind of life; and
he will dominate in the territory all kinds of life that may temporarily
conflict with his use of it. Most birds and beasts use their large or
tiny bit of earth in pairs, flocks, herds, or colonies. The grizzly uses
his alone. His domain may be in part the claimed territory of other
species; lions, beavers, wolves, eagles, and other life may use it.

The grizzly bear is the aristocrat of the wilds. He is lordly and
reserved. He will meet a bighorn sheep or other wild animal, and, though
aware of its presence, pay no apparent attention to it. If near another
bear, either a black or a grizzly, while appearing to be disinterested,
or pretending not to have seen him, he is in fact watching the other's
movements. A black bear avoids him. Sometimes two grizzlies who have
been feeding near each other deliberately meet, or come face to face.
Each, with admirable acting, feigns intense surprise that the other is
there. They bristle up, exchange a few unfriendly roars and growls, make
a threatening move or two, and then go on. Sometimes they pass as though
unconscious of each other's presence.

A network of trails extends over the grizzly's mountain home. These
reach food-supply centres, lookout and resting stations, swimming-holes,
and other places often visited. Generally when going anywhere the
grizzly follows a trail; if pursued, he is most certain to do so. Many
of these trails are dim, but others are deeply worn. He may sometimes
make a new trail, but in general he follows the old ones which have been
used by generations of bears. His domain may be crossed by other
wild-life trails, which he may or may not use.

Topography, mountain barriers, streams, or other natural boundary-lines
in part determine the form of the grizzly's home territory. The size is
determined by the food-supply, by the bear population of the region, and
by individual prowess. A bear of exceptional prowess may hold an empire.

The territory dominated by old "Timberline" had an area of about eighty
square miles. The western boundary-line followed the rim of the
Continental Divide for nearly fifteen miles. Meeker Ridge and Cony
Creek were other boundary-lines, while at the north stood Chief's Head
Mountain and Long's Peak. Toward the south the territory narrowed and
was not more than two miles across; in the centre it must have been
nearly ten miles wide. An extensive area lay above the timber-line.
There were forests primeval, a number of cañons and streams, numerous
small lakes and beaver ponds. In this varied and extensive region old
"Timberline" had all the necessities of life and many of the luxuries of
beardom.

The claw-marks and the tooth-marks which grizzlies and some other
animals place on trees are often interpreted as being "No Trespass"
signs, indications of boundary-lines, survey marks, or the seal of
ownership of the landlord. If these marks are extremely high, they are
supposed to inspire respect for the one occupying the region, or to
cause terror to the invader, unless he be large enough to reach higher.
But I question any such significance attached to these marks. Ofttimes
the bear leaves these marks in the centre of his home range, sometimes
within the home territory of a lion or a big-horn. While the idea of its
being a mark of ownership is a most artistic and entertaining one, it
does not appear to have any natural-history value.

I have seen bears, reaching high, tear out pieces of bark, and have also
seen both bears and lions put claw-marks upon trees. Generally this
clawing and biting was done during languid and leisurely moments when
there was nothing definite to do. One day I watched a grizzly stand on
hind feet upon a five-foot snowdrift where he had been lying. Placing
his front paws against a spruce as high as he could reach, he clawed the
bark indifferently. It was more of a muscle-stretching performance than
anything else. He took a tiny bite out of the tree and walked off with
the strip of bark in his mouth. Then he gave it a playful shake and
dropped it.

It is well known that wolves, beavers, and some other animals have
information places. These may or may not be intentionally established.
Some of these places are where wild-life trails cross, or are near
water-holes, salt-licks, play places, or some neutral feeding-ground.
They may be frequented exclusively by one species or by several. Even
the casual visits and bark-biting of bears incidentally contribute
something of interest to the next visitors. In these places an animal
may learn of the recent visit of one of his species or of a dreaded
enemy, or may even find information as to the sex of the visitors. They
are thus akin to country cross-roads where gossip is exchanged
concerning human affairs.

A grizzly that I was trailing turned abruptly aside to visit a news
station of this kind. Plainly it was a loafing or frequented spot for
wild life; from the nature of the topography and from numerous tracks
seen during later visits I learned that it was a stamping-ground and a
trail-crossing. Foxes, coyotes, skunks, rats, deer, and mountain sheep
had been visitors. The manner in which the bear turned aside to visit
the place suggested that he had been there before; but he may just have
caught interesting, newsy scent which attracted him there for the first
time. His actions were those of one who is hunting for news.

At night the bear may lie down in almost any place, but during the
daytime he selects one of the safest places in his realm. If in the high
mountains this may be on a ridge above the timber-line, or on a treeless
hilltop from which he commands a wide outlook, or in the end of a cañon,
or in a thicket. Wherever the place, it is one where the bear cannot be
easily surprised, and where his scouts--his scent, his sight, and his
ears--would easily warn him of the approach of any possible danger.

When pursued, the grizzly tries to keep within his domain. Usually he
travels only seven or eight miles in one direction, then doubles back,
circles, and zigzags. Only two or three times when trailing the bear
have I known him to travel more than fourteen or fifteen miles in one
direction. In one long trailing experience I observed that the bear,
with many twists and zigzags, covered his domain practically twice over.
I trailed the same grizzly two Septembers, three years apart. I started
him the second time near the place where I had started him before, and
he followed for three days over almost exactly the same route taken the
first time.

Three prospectors and I were rowing across a lake in the Sawtooth
Mountains of Idaho. When about half a mile from the farther shore, we
spied a grizzly swimming across. We pursued, and when we got near, one
of the men proposed to rope him, saying that the bear could now tow us
ashore. The other two protested so vigorously that the rope was not
thrown. Fortunate for us that it was not, for had it fallen over the
neck of Mr. Grizzly, the chances are that he might have climbed into the
boat. In Alaska I saw a grizzly out at sea, swimming vigorously along
between two islands that were seven miles apart. The grizzly is fond of
water, is an excellent and enduring swimmer, and in the water fights
effectively.

While I was on a winter trip into the San Juan Mountains a prospector
told me of an occurrence which he had just witnessed. A snow-slide
crashing down into a gulch close to a grizzly den aroused the bear, who
came out with a rush to see what was going on. He did not lose his head,
but looked about until the air cleared of the swirling snow-dust. Then
he walked round the wreckage brought down by the slide and finally
climbed it and explored the opening it had smashed through the woods.
After being out more than an hour he re-entered the den.

Though living a solitary life in the seclusion of the wilderness, this
bear was again routed out before spring. His den was only a few feet
above the stream, on the mountain-side. The débris brought down by the
snow-slide forty or fifty feet up the gulch dammed the stream and raised
the water so that it leaked through the earth into the den. Again
driven forth from his den, the bear--so his tracks in the snow
showed--after one pause climbed to another den on the mountain-side
about two miles distant.

The grizzly spends about one third of each year in hibernation. He may
use the same den year after year, repairing and reshaping it; or perhaps
he will dig a new one. Sometimes he goes outside his own territory for a
den to his liking. He is sometimes driven forth during hibernation by
landslides as well as by snow-slides and floods.

A grizzly is strongly attached to his home territory and spends most of
his time in it. Occasionally, and in exceptional cases regularly, he
wanders far away. A scarcity of food may cause him to leave home
temporarily; or excessive food elsewhere may attract him.

Bears and lions are not neighborly, and at best each ignores the other;
but one bear I knew followed a lion for weeks, and others have
occasionally done likewise, profiting by the food-supply--the excessive
killing of the lion. Here was unusual tolerance, almost friendly
association, between antagonistic wild folk.

The abundance of food at any place in a bear's territory gives other
grizzlies public rights. A berry-patch or a stream which has a supply
equal to the needs of many bears, a beaver pond, or a lake, may become a
public feeding-place. A flood, a storm, a snow-slide, or other agency
may take the lives of a number of animals--cause a congestion of food in
any territory.

That there sometimes is fighting in these public places, and that one
bear sometimes tries to hog a larger food-supply than he can use does
not change the custom of the species. Incidentally, this violation of
general or public rights but reminds us how human-like are bears in
their habits, good and bad.

Lewis and Clark found a number of grizzlies congregated at places along
the Missouri River. Apparently these had got together like those in
Yellowstone Park, because of congested food-supply. It appears that at
regular crossings along the river numbers of buffalo were annually
drowned, and carcasses regularly strewn at about the same places.

There are a number of regions in Alaska where a bear lives in his own
chosen locality but regularly goes to a public feeding-ground. Much of
the food is along the seashore and on the lower courses of streams.
There is also a food-belt above the timber-line, where mice abound and
where there is grass upon which bears feed. The seasonal nature of part
of the food may thus encourage or compel bears of one locality to travel
a long distance to secure the only food obtainable.

If there be straggling grizzlies who wander about like gypsies, they are
the rare exception: the nearest to them were the few "buffalo
grizzlies," those that in old days followed the migrating buffalo herds.

Though the problem of getting a living makes up most of the grizzly's
daily programme, he knows the wisdom of taking time off and having a
change from the routine of life. The ability to concentrate in eager
play is probably one of the best evidences of the grizzly's unusual
brain-power. It is good to know that, although most of the time he lives
alone and takes things seriously, he also has the power to relax and to
build and restore himself in play. This may help to give contentment to
solitary life in home territory.

When well fed, the grizzly sometimes strolls over his estate and pauses
to watch the antics of other wild life. He will stand in a stream to
see the ways of water-ouzels. The sliding of otter at play appears to
interest him, and I have discovered otter-slides by following his tracks
to them. Once, when I was enjoying the play of a number of beaver racing
and splashing in a pond, a grizzly watched them for a time from the edge
of the woods, then came out on the dam and sat down where he could
better see them. Though a solitary and self-contained baron, he has many
entertaining interests.

There are times at home, or abroad, when the grizzly is not deeply
interested in anything, when time hangs a little heavy on his hands, or
on his mind. Sometimes at home he doesn't quite know what to do with
himself. He isn't hungry, he can't think of any place where he cares to
go, he isn't interested in swimming, he doesn't even want to play. He
doesn't care to lie down and sleep. He starts off languidly, stops,
moves on, rears up, takes a bite out of the bark of a tree; but he
doesn't care for the bark to eat and doesn't even look up to see how
high he has bitten.

The grizzly is a descendant of a long line of wanderers and may
occasionally explore surrounding territory for sheer adventure. If much
harassed by settlers, he will move to a permanent home in lands far
distant. It would be comparatively easy for a grizzly to become
acquainted with four or five thousand miles of territory. He travels
rapidly, has endurance, and in a single night could cover a hundred
miles or more.

Some bears get the idea of territorial expansion and go forth to seize a
part of a neighbor's hunting-ground. Thus one bear may be annoyed by
another who makes too frequent raids into his domain, and feel called
upon to defend his territory against the invader. When past prime a bear
is sometimes driven forth into an unfriendly world by a young, vigorous
conqueror.

On one occasion I tracked a grizzly for sixty miles from the margin of
its home range. It traveled along a line that indicated it had a
definite place in mind to which it was going. It explored a cañon
region, and, a day or two later, as tracks in the snow showed, went back
to its old range along the trail it had followed in leaving it.

Going one autumn from Estes Park to North Park, Colorado, I came upon a
grizzly's track in the upper end of Forest Cañon. For several miles it
had followed an old wild-life trail. It crossed the Continental Divide,
then the No-Summer Mountains. From its trail I judged that it, too, knew
where it was going.

Had these bears gone to explore, to see the opportunities of a new
region? Or had they returned to old territory which they knew, perhaps
to obtain some particular kind of food, or just to have an outing? If
seeking new domains, it is possible that they would explore a number of
localities before selecting one.

In a few localities bears migrate in the spring and return home in the
fall. In these migrations the grizzly breaks his solitary custom and
travels in company. Most likely the bears happen to be on the same route
at the same time, and, like Pullman passengers, travel together without
speaking.

I saw eight grizzly bears one November traveling single file northward
from Middle Park. Back-tracking, I found that they had come from the
mountainous empire around the southern end of this park. They crossed
over into North Park in almost a straight line. Were they, I wondered,
heading for a new home, or was this an annual foraging affair? The
topography of the country traveled had some bearing on the common route
taken, but why were they traveling together? I heard of a number of
bears traveling together in northern New Mexico.

On one occasion a hunter on No-Wood Creek in the Big Horns saw seven old
grizzlies and two cubs together in the autumn. They were back-tracked to
the Yellowstone Park. The garbage-dumps in the Park are frequented by
neighboring bears and by numbers from outside the bounds of the Park.

As bears age, their teeth become broken and badly worn away. With
difficulty they manage to live. They are often handicapped through loss
of toes and by other injuries received in accidents and fights, and
through a weakening of faculties due to age. Their normal life appears
to be from thirty-five to fifty years.

In the mountains of the north of Yellowstone Park I came upon an
extremely old, hard-looking bear. I sat for some time within forty feet
of him, watching him rip an old log to pieces to get the ants and white
grubs. I was so close that I could see his tongue as it busily licked to
right and left. His red-looking eyes stared strangely. I think that he
must have been nearly blind, and also that he had nearly lost his
ability to scent. When I moved a little closer, he stopped eating, rose
up, sniffed the air queerly as though endeavoring to catch scent of me,
then listened and looked. He was not at all sure of my presence, though
looking in my direction. Two or three days later this old bear was
killed. Many of his teeth were gone, and others were badly worn away.
His claws were extremely blunt. His head and hide showed many
scars--marks of fights and marks from numerous bullets.

One February, when I was spending a few days with a prospector, he
brought home the interesting news that he had found a dead grizzly bear.
The bear evidently had died while hibernating. He was found curled up in
his den and frozen solid. He was old, in poor condition, and his insides
were swarming with vermin. I once found a fat young grizzly, apparently
healthy, who had the appearance of having frozen to death while
hibernating. The time was about the middle of January. The winter to
date had been extremely cold, and but little snow had fallen.

I have known of other grizzlies who met strange deaths, but, considering
the fairly numerous grizzly population at the time when I was wandering
the wilds, the number of bodies found is surprisingly small. One of
these grizzlies had perished in a forest fire, another in a desert
flood, one was killed at the foot of a cliff by a falling stone, and
another was crushed in a snow-slide. Just how or where most old
grizzlies come to an end, or what becomes of their bones, I have never
been able to learn. It may be that many of them die in the winter dens,
which cave in and bury the remains. In closing his adventurous career
the grizzly appears to conceal the trail to his last resting-place.




Making a Bear Living


Glancing across a beaver pond one day, I saw a big, grayish grizzly bear
walk out into the grassy opening. My presence was not suspected, and I
at once focused my field-glasses upon him. Here and there he went. As a
grasshopper leaped into the air, the bear--big, fat, awkward, lumbering
fellow that he was--leaped into the air after it. Striking the
grasshopper with a fore paw, he would knock it to the ground and then
pick it up with his teeth. Occasionally he advanced on all fours and
slapped his paw upon the grasshopper before it leaped into the air. Once
two grasshoppers flew up at the same instant. The bear stood still,
located the spot where each had alighted, and then paid his respects to
them in turn.

About this time another bear came into the opening within a hundred feet
of the scene of activity. He was dark-gray, almost black, in color, but
he too was a grizzly. After smelling here and there, the second bear dug
out something; I think it must have been a nestful of mice. A minute
later in the edge of the tall grass he found a bumblebee's nest. This
he ate in its entirety. Apparently two or three of the bees escaped, to
judge from the bear's rapid defense of his nose. Occasionally, as he
walked about, he ate a huge mouthful of grass, taking three or four
bites at a time.

Neither of these bears paid the slightest attention to the other. Though
each must have known, from both scent and sight, that the other was
near, they very successfully appeared to be oblivious of the fact. A
beaver pond is often a neutral feeding and swimming place.

"As hungry as a bear" is an expression of variable meaning. About one
third of the year a bear has an omnivorous appetite; for another four
months he lives on short rations; and during the remainder of the year
he goes on a food strike and hibernates.

A bear spends most of his waking hours making a living. He has simply a
devastating appetite, and as his taste runs to small stuff and dainties,
he is kept on the move.

  [Illustration: MEXICAN GRIZZLIES
    _Group in the Field Columbian Museum_]

If he denned high up the mountain-side his surroundings are likely to be
mostly snow-covered when he comes forth in the spring. Under such
conditions he travels miles down the mountains to feed on the early
plants already started on the low-lands. He may then slowly follow
spring and summer in their steady advance up the far-reaching slopes. To
a certain extent his movements are determined by the calendar. He feeds
upon the best the season affords. He knows when each article of diet is
in season and where in his home territory, or out of it, this abounds.
In berry time look for a bear in a berry-patch. Like an enthusiastic
fisherman he impatiently waits for the open season--spawning-time--and
is on hand early to start fishing.

Perhaps it would be well if we could think of the grizzly as being
largely vegetarian. He digs up roots; feeds on weeds, tender shoots of
shrubbery, fungi, mushrooms, berries, seeds, rose-hips, pine-nuts, and
acorns; and also eats bark like a rabbit and grass like a grass-eater.

The aspens were in bloom, laden with swollen buds and juicy catkins.
Many birds were feasting on the catkins; and, looking over into a
near-by aspen thicket, I saw a grizzly on a ledge also feeding eagerly.
Reaching for a limb, first with one fore paw and then the other, he bit
off a few inches and ate twigs, bark, and bloom. Occasionally he seized
the top of an aspen with both paws, bent it down, and bit it off. It was
similar to the fashion followed in eating wild plums and choke-cherries.
A bear will reach up and pull down the top of a plum tree, and, biting
it off, eat the small limbs, the bark, the leaves, and the fruit. A
grizzly browsing in a wild raspberry-patch will bite off the tops of the
vines together with the berries, the leaves, and the thorns. Sometimes
the twigs and terminal buds of the pine, the fir, and the spruce are
eaten.

One day I saw a grizzly approaching in a manner which indicated that he
knew exactly where he was going. On arriving at an alder clump by the
brook he at once began tearing off the bark and eating it. On another
occasion I watched a bear strip nearly all the bark within reach from a
young balsam fir. I have often seen places where bears had bitten and
torn chunks of bark from aspens and cottonwoods. Though they also tear
the bark from pine and spruce trees, I do not believe that this is eaten
as frequently as the bark of the broad-leaved trees.

During the first few weeks after coming out of the winter den much of
the grizzly's food is likely to be of the salad order--juicy young plant
stalks, watery shoots, tender bark, young grasses, buds, and leaves. In
late autumn, just before hibernating, his last courses are mostly roots
and nuts.

However, the normal grizzly is an omnivorous feeder, refusing only human
flesh. He will eat anything that is edible--meat (fresh, stale, or
carrion), wasps, yellow-jackets, grasshoppers, ants and their eggs,
bugs, and grubs. Of course he eats honey and the bees. He also captures
snakes, and many a rat and rabbit. He is a destroyer of many pests that
afflict man, and in the realm of economic biology he should be rated
high. I doubt if a dozen cats, hawks, or owls annually catch as many
mice as the average grizzly.

The food of a grizzly is largely determined by locality. Along the
streams of the northern Pacific Coast he lives chiefly upon fish, while
the grizzlies in the Bitter Root Mountains and British Columbia
generally feed upon roots and plants. Those in the Rocky Mountains of
Colorado and the Southwest have a mixed diet.

The spring-beauty, the dog-tooth violet, and the shooting-star, both
tops and roots, supply the grizzlies of some localities with much of
their food, while in other regions they rarely, and possibly never,
touch them, though they grow abundantly. The bears in the Bitter Root
Mountains eat the shooting-star freely, while the violet and the
spring-beauty are favored by the bears of the Selkirks. Yet, strange
though it is, the bears of both localities pay but little attention to
carcasses which they find. One of the plant roots which the bears of
British Columbia dig out in autumn until the ground is frozen, is a wild
pea, the hedysarum.

I frequently followed a grizzly whose home territory was close to my
cabin in the Rocky Mountains. Apparently he liked everything. One day he
spent hours digging out mice. On another he caught a rabbit. He ate a
bumblebee's nest, and, with the nest, the grass, the bees, their young,
their honey, and their stings. In a homesteader's garden he dug out and
ate nearly one hundred pounds of potatoes and turnips. The homesteader
thought that a hog had been in his garden. In places I too have thought
that hogs had been rooting where bears had simply been digging for
roots--places with dug and upturned earth often many square yards in
extent. They dig out the roots of the wild parsnip, the shooting-star,
and grass, the bulbs of lilies, and sometimes the roots of willow and
alder.

I endeavored to find out the kind of food preferred by two young bears
that I raised. A number of times I approached them with a plate upon
which were cake, meat, and honey. In my pockets I generally had also
either turnips or apples. When I appeared the bears usually stood on
hind legs to see what I had. If they caught the scent of apples or
turnips, they thrust paws or noses into my pockets, ignoring the
dainties on the plate. Otherwise they grabbed whatever happened to be
nearest them on the plate.

All grizzlies appear to be fond of fish. In many places they are most
successful fishermen. I watched a grizzly standing in the riffles of an
Idaho stream, partly concealed by a willow clump. In half an hour he
knocked five large salmon ashore. With a single lightning-like stroke of
a fore paw, the fish was flung out of the water and sent flying fifteen
or twenty feet. Rarely did he miss. Each of the salmon weighed several
pounds.

A grizzly in the Sawtooth region, trying to catch some fish, sprawled
out on a low bank by the edge of a stream. Holding himself with one fore
paw, he reached over with the other and felt along the bank beneath the
water. He did this very much as a fat man might. More frequently the
bear makes a stand in driftwood on the bank, or on a log that has fallen
into the stream, or behind a willow clump. Sometimes he captures fish by
wading up a brook and seizing with claws or teeth those that conceal
themselves beneath banks and projecting roots.

A huge brown grizzly mother catching trout for her two fat cubs held my
attention one day. The cubs waited on the grassy bank of a brook while
the mother brought them trout after trout. She sometimes caught the fish
by thrusting her nose into the water beneath the bank or by reaching in
with her paws. Occasionally she knocked them out of the water as they
endeavored to dash past her in the riffles. The cubs watched her every
move; but they were not allowed to enter the water.

Sometimes the grizzly will collect and cover over an excess of carcasses
or fish. By a little mountain lake at the headwaters of the Columbia I
found a pile of stale salmon beneath a number of large logs and stones.
The fish had been caught during spawning-time and stored for future
consumption. A day or two later I returned, and tracks showed that the
bear had come back and consumed the salmon.

The grizzly eagerly earns his own living; he is not a loafer. Much work
is done in digging out a cony, a woodchuck, or some other small animal
from a rock-slide. In two hours' time I have known him to move a mass of
earth that must have weighed tons, leaving an excavation large enough
for a private cellar. I have come upon numbers of holes from which a
grizzly had removed literally tons of stone. In places these holes were
five or six feet deep. Around the edges the stones were piled as though
for a barricade. In some of them several soldiers could have found room
and excellent shelter for ordinary defense.

When a large stone is encountered in his digging the grizzly grabs it
with both fore paws, shakes and tears it loose from the earth, and hurls
it aside. I have seen him toss huge stones over his shoulder and throw
larger ones forward with one paw. Grizzlies show both skill and thought
in nearly everything they do. They have strength, alert wits, and clever
paws, and commonly work at high speed. Yet they appear deliberate in
their actions and work in a painstaking, careful manner.

A grizzly I followed one day paused in a grassy space to dig out mice.
In reaching them he discovered a chipmunk's burrow. By the time he had
secured all the mice and chipmunks he had torn up several square yards
of sod. The place had the appearance of having been rooted up by hogs.
In this fresh earth the surrounding trees sowed triumphant seeds, and
here a cluster of spruces grew where grass had long held sway.

A grizzly seems never too busy or too hungry to stop and look around.
"Safety First" appears to be more on his mind than eating. I have seen a
grizzly pause from his earth-digging after roots to stop, look, and
listen, and I have watched one stop his more than eager digging after
marmots to scent the air in his scout for an enemy. And then again I
have repeatedly seen him look up from his feast of smelly sirloin to
make certain that he was not surprised by man.

While I was watching a flock of mountain sheep feeding down a slope just
above the timber-line, a grizzly appeared on the scene. He came slowly
upward from the woods. Unless the sheep or the bear changed course there
must be a meeting. But the sheep continued to feed downward and the
grizzly to walk up. Suddenly the bear stopped and began digging--digging
evidently for a chipmunk. A stream of earth was sent flying behind him.
Occasionally, too, a huge stone was sent hurtling back. This activity
roused the curiosity of the sheep, and they approached within perhaps
ten or twelve feet. They were lined up and eagerly watching the grizzly
when he became aware of their presence. Disliking their close approach,
he leaped at them with a terrific "Woof!" The sheep scattered wildly but
ran only a few yards. Again uniting, they fed quietly away, and the
grizzly returned to his digging.

In only exceptional cases has the grizzly been a killer of big game. In
his search for food he digs out small mammals and kills rabbits and
beaver. He is not likely to attempt anything as large as wild sheep, but
when a grizzly forms the habit of killing big animals he is likely to
make this serve as his entire food-supply. Thus a cattle-killing grizzly
is likely to give his chief attention to the killing of cattle, or
incidentally to that of sheep, deer, or elk. In the days of the buffalo
the great herds frequently were trailed by one or more grizzlies. These,
however, probably obtained most of their meat from carcasses left behind
by storms, drowning, or other means of death.

The misfortunes of other animals often provide a feast for the grizzly.
In going over an area just swept by a forest fire I saw two grizzlies
feasting, and there were feasts for numerous others. One was wading in
an abandoned beaver pond and feasting on the dead trout that floated on
the surface. Two black bears, despite terrible threats from the grizzly,
claimed all the fish that came within reach of the shore, but discreetly
kept out of the pond. During the second day's exploration of the burn a
bear came upon me while I was eating from a fire-killed, roasted deer.
When I moved on, the waiting grizzly walked up to dine.

A grizzly knows the location of every beaver pond in his territory. It
is one of his favorite loafing and feeding places. Often he rolls and
swims about in the water, enjoying himself immensely. Here he sometimes
finds a stale fish or a dead bird brought down by the stream. Sometimes
he eats a huge salad of pond-lilies.

But when beaver are gathering the harvest, especially if it is gathered
at some distance from the water, he lies in wait and overhauls them. He
is ready, too, to seize upon any of these unfortunate fellows who is
accidentally killed or injured in gnawing down a tree. Many a time I
have seen the fresh tracks of a mother and her cubs on the muddy shore
of a beaver pond, and sometimes the tracks of both black bears and
grizzlies.

In the course of miles of daily wandering the grizzly may occasionally
come upon a wounded animal or a carcass. If his find be large, he may
lie close until it is consumed; or he may make a cache of it, returning
again and again until it is eaten. Grizzlies will bury an elk in the
earth or cover the carcass of a cow with numbers of logs. Nothing is
more common than for them to cover a carcass with refuse consisting of
twigs, fallen leaves, grass, and trash. They will cover a quantity of
fish with stones and logs.

A few grizzlies become cattle-killers; many grizzlies eat cattle they
did not kill. On the live-stock ranges in the mountains of the West
cattle die from many causes. They succumb to disease and to accidents.
Winds proclaim carcass news and a feast to flesh-eaters near and far.
Bears have amazingly keen noses and often are the first to enjoy the
feast.

A grizzly I was following caught the scent of a carcass that was more
than a mile away. He stopped and sniffed, then changed his course and
set off for the carcass. The carcass was being watched. As the grizzly
was the first animal to arrive after the kill, the owner of the cow
concluded that he was guilty of the killing, and accordingly proceeded
to kill him and to condemn all bears as cattle-killers. Yet this cow had
died from feeding too freely upon poisonous larkspur.

I was once trailing a grizzly through the snow, when he came upon the
trail of a mountain lion, which he followed. Farther along the lion
killed a horse. When the grizzly came upon the scene, he drove the lion
off. The following day, while having a second feast off the horse, he
was discovered by a rancher, who at once procured dogs and pursued and
killed the "famous horse-killing grizzly."

I have not heard of an authentic instance of a grizzly's eating human
flesh. Numbers of hunters have been killed by grizzlies, but their
bodies were not eaten; they were not killed for food. Many persons have
lost their lives from storms, accidents, and starvation; yet their
bodies have lain for days and weeks in territory frequented by grizzlies
without being eaten by them. A prospector, his horse, and his burro were
killed by a falling tree. Grizzlies devoured the bodies of the animals,
but that of the prospector was not disturbed. Human flesh appears to be
the only thing a grizzly does not eat.




The Long Winter Sleep


When the food of the grizzly bear becomes scarce, he goes to bed and
sleeps until a reasonable supply is available, even though he waits five
months for it. He feasts on the fullness of the land during the summer
and wraps himself in a thick blanket of fat. When winter comes on, he
digs a hole and crawls in. This layer of fat is a non-conductor of cold
and in due time is drawn on for food.

One autumn day I visited the Hallett Glacier with a professor from the
University of Chicago. After exploring one of the upper crevasses, we
stood looking down the steep slope of the glacier. New snow had fallen a
few days before, and a soft, slushy coating still overlaid the ice. The
professor challenged me to coast down the steep, snow-lubricated
ice-slope. We seated ourselves on this soft, slippery snow, and he gave
the word "Go." Just as we slid away, we saw at the bottom of the slope,
where we were soon to be, a huge grizzly bear. I wish you might have
seen our efforts as we tried to change our minds on that steep slope!
The grizzly was busily eating grasshoppers, but he heard us coming and
fled at a racing gallop, giving an excellent exhibition of his clumsy
hind legs reaching out flat-footed.

Each autumn numbers of insects and sometimes bushels of grasshoppers
either are blown upon the ice and snow or else approach it too closely
and fall from having their wings chilled. Evidently the grizzlies long
ago learned of this food-supply, for the ice-fields are regularly
visited by them during the autumn. Along the timber-line the grizzly
feeds freely upon the last of autumn's berries and the last green
plants. Many a grizzly goes to the heights to put on fat for his long
winter's sleep.

Bear food becomes scarce as winter approaches. Fruit, berries, grass,
and weeds are out of season; most birds and insects are gone. The bear
feeds on what remains--small animals which he digs out, a stray stranded
fish, now and then a dead bird or animal carcass, the red fruit of the
rose, and the nuts, bark, and roots of trees and plants. I do not
believe the grizzly eats a special or a purgative food during the few
days preceding his denning up, although he may do so.

On the few occasions when I have been able to keep track of a bear
during the four or five days immediately preceding his retirement, he
did not eat a single thing. I have examined a number of grizzlies that
were killed while hibernating, and in every instance the stomach and
intestines were empty. These facts lead me to conclude that bears rest
and fast for a few days before going permanently to the winter den.

The bear generally prepares his winter quarters in advance of the time
needed. He may occasionally sleep in his den before taking possession of
it for the winter. But this is exceptional. In two cases that I know of
he lay outside the den, though near it; and a number of other times he
kept away from the den until he entered it for the long sleep. After the
den is completely ready, the grizzly continues his usual search for
food. Generally this requires long excursions and he may wander miles
from the den.

In climbing along the bottom of a deep, narrow ravine one November day,
I saw on the slope above me what appeared to be a carload or more of
freshly dumped earth. My first thought was that a prospector was at work
driving a tunnel; but upon examination it proved to be a recently
finished but not yet occupied hibernating-den. The entrance was about
three feet in diameter. Just inside the den was a trifle larger. It
extended, nearly level, about twelve feet into the mountain-side. At the
back it was six feet across and four feet high.

The size of the den varies and is apparently determined by the character
of the soil in which it is made and also by the inclination of the bear
making it. Most other dens measured were smaller than this one.

The grizzly may use the same den for several winters or have a new one
each year. He may dig the den himself or take an old one that some other
bear has used, or he may make use of one shaped by Nature--a cave or a
rock-slide. I knew of one grizzly hibernating in a prospector's
abandoned tunnel. Sometimes, like the black bear, he will dig a den on a
steep mountain-side beneath the widely spreading roots of trees;
sometimes beneath a large fallen log, close to the upturned roots which
support it. In crossing the mountains one February I noticed a steamy
vapor rising from a hole in the snow by the protruding roots of an
overturned tree. I walked to the hole to investigate. The vapor was rank
with the odor of a bear. Near my home on the slope of Long's Peak I
have known grizzlies to den up beneath the snow-crushed, matted
tree-growths at the timber-line, at an altitude of about eleven thousand
feet.

Twice I have known bears to hibernate in enormous nests that were made
of the long fibres of cedar bark. It must have taken days to construct
one of these nests, as more than forty cedar trees had been more or less
disrobed to supply material for it. It resembled the nests of trash that
razor-back hogs in the South construct, though much larger. The bear,
after piling it up, worked his way in near the bottom, somewhat after
the fashion of a boy crawling into a haycock. Over this hibernating-nest
the snow spread its blanket and probably afforded all the protection
needed.

Sometimes the entrance to a den is partly closed by the occupant. Once
in, he reaches out and claws the lower part full of earth, or rakes in
trash and leaves. In most instances nothing is done to close the
entrance. The snows drift back into the den, pile upward, and at last
close the entrance most effectually.

All the dens that I recall were upon northerly or easterly--the
cooler--slopes. The snow as it fell would be likely to remain and close
or blanket the entrance all winter long. Snow evidently enters into the
grizzly's winter plans.

Late one cold, snowless December I came upon a grizzly carrying spruce
boughs into his den. Evidently he had used the den and found it cold.
The den had a large opening; this he may have been intending to close.
The rocky floor was already piled a foot deep with boughs. I have seen
two other dens with floor-coverings; one of these was of pine twigs, and
the other of coarse grass and kinnikinnick. But in most cases the bear
sleeps upon the uncovered rocks or the naked earth.

Snow is a factor in determining when a bear begins his winter sleep. If
he is fat and food is scarce, an early, heavy snow is pretty certain to
cause him to turn in early. If no snow comes and food is still to be
had, the bear is likely to delay his hibernation.

The individual inclination of the bear and his condition--whether fat or
thin--are also factors which influence his time of retiring. I knew of
two bears, apparently of similar condition, one of whom turned in three
weeks earlier than the other. Two bears whom I noticed one winter ran
about more than a month after all the other bears had disappeared. Both
were thin--just why I should like to know. They also turned in shortly
after they became rounded out. Generally bears of a locality turn in for
winter at about the same time. Hibernating may begin early in November,
but in most localities, and in most years, the time is likely to be a
month later.

In Alaska and the Northwest many bears hibernate in the heights above
the timber-line. I have found a number in the mountains of Colorado with
winter quarters at an altitude of twelve thousand feet. In southern
Colorado and in the Yellowstone Park region many have denned up at about
the altitude of six thousand feet. But a grizzly may hibernate anywhere
in his territory where he can find or make a den to his liking.

Except when there are cubs, a grizzly dens alone. Accounts which tell of
a number of full-grown grizzlies spending the winter in one den lack
verification. The cubs are born in the hibernating-den, and they den up
with the mother the first, and sometimes the second, winter after their
birth. The cubs generally den up together the first winter after they
are weaned.

Once in for the winter, the bear is likely to stay in the den for weeks.
Most of the time probably is spent sleeping, and, so far as known,
without either food or water. A bear may be routed out of his winter
quarters without difficulty. Generally his sleep is not heavy enough
greatly to deaden his senses. Hunters, trappers, floods, and snow-slides
have driven grizzlies from their dens during every stage of hibernation,
and in each case a moment after the bear came forth his senses were as
alert as ever; he was able either to run away or to fight in his normal
manner.

Prospectors in Jefferson Valley, Montana, told me of staking claims and
starting to drive a tunnel early one December. A day or two after they
began blasting they saw a bear break out of a snowy den and scamper away
on the mountain-side. They tracked him to the place where he had holed
up again. It was their belief that the noise or the jar of their shots
had awakened and re-awakened the bear, until, disgusted, he left the
region for a quieter sleeping-place.

A sniffling and grunting attracted my attention one midwinter day as I
was snowshoeing along the side of a ravine. Presently, a short distance
ahead of me, I saw a grizzly's nose thrust out of a hole in the snowy
slope. Then his head followed. Sleepily the grizzly half-opened his
eyes, then closed them again. His shaking and drooping head fell lower
and lower, until with a jerk he raised it only to let it droop again. He
repeated this performance a number of times. Evidently it was the head
of a very sleepy grizzly. Occasionally he opened his eyes for a moment,
but he did not seem interested in the outside world and he finally
withdrew his head and disappeared in the den.

After midwinter, and especially towards spring, a bear sometimes comes
out for fresh air and exercise, or to sun himself. One gray February
day, snowshoeing along the Big South Poudre, I chanced to look across an
opening from the edge of the woods and saw a grizzly walking round and
round in a well-beaten pathway in the snow. Occasionally he reared up,
faced about, and walked round in the opposite direction. His den was
near by. Half a mile farther on I came upon a bear trail near the
entrance to another den. Here the bear had walked back and forth in a
pathway that was about sixty feet long. It was beaten down in the snow
to a depth of fifteen inches. Two places showed that the bear had
rolled and wallowed about in the snow.

Elsewhere, another year, about the middle of March, I examined much-worn
pathways near a grizzly's den. These had been made at least three weeks
before and had been used a number of times. One pathway led to the base
of a cliff that faced the east, where the bear had probably lain in the
morning sun. Another led to a much-used spot that caught the afternoon
sun.

Perhaps a bear sometimes becomes tired or restless during his long
winter sleep. Now and then he comes forth in spring with the fur worn
off his hips, back, or shoulders. He may kill time, when through
sleeping, with a short excursion outside the den. If the den is large,
he sometimes tramples about like a caged animal.

Climatic conditions, the altitude at which the bear hibernated, and
other factors determine the time when grizzlies leave their dens. Most
of them come forth during March, but stragglers may not appear until
late in April. Mothers with cubs remain in the den a few weeks longer
than bears without cubs.

At the limits of tree growth, one cold March day, I came upon the tracks
of a grizzly bear descending the mountain. I back-tracked them and
found the den in which the grizzly had spent the winter. The inside of
the den was gravelly and comparatively clean. Only this single line of
tracks led from the den, though the weather had been clear for a week;
so I judged this was the first time the grizzly had sauntered forth. It
was just sundown when I reached the den. The heights were icy, and I
hesitated about continuing across the Divide that night, so concluded to
occupy the den. I knew that bears often take a short ramble in the
spring and then return to the den, but I took the chances of sharing it
with him. I do not know what the grizzly did that night--whether or not
he came back. But my fire in the mouth of the den may have kept him at
bay.

The hard, cracked skin on the soles of the grizzly's feet is shed during
hibernation, and the feet in spring are soft and tender. For several
days he avoids traveling over rough places. His claws grow out during
the winter rest, also. When he goes to sleep they are worn, broken, and
blunt; but he comes out of winter quarters with claws long and
moderately pointed.

What is the grizzly's condition in the spring after months of fasting?
He has hibernated from three to five months, and in this time probably
has taken neither water nor food. First of all he comes forth fat and
not in the least hungry. The walls of his stomach have greatly
contracted, almost completely closing the interior. Two stomachs which I
saw taken from grizzlies killed early in the spring were as hard as
chunks of rubber, and had capacity for not more than two or three
spoonfuls. But when the grizzly reappears after his long winter sleep he
is as strong as ever and can run for hours or fight with normal
effectiveness.

He may not eat anything for a few days after leaving the den. For many
days he eats lightly, and it may be two weeks before he has a normal
appetite. His first food is likely to be the early, tender shoots of
plants or trees, tuberous roots, swelling buds, and green grass.

I once watched a grizzly for seven days after he emerged from his
hibernating-cave. His winter quarters were near timber-line on Battle
Mountain, at an altitude of nearly twelve thousand feet. The winter had
been of average temperature, but with scanty snow-fall. I saw him, by
chance, just as he left the den, on the first day of March. He walked
about aimlessly for an hour or more, then returned to his sleeping-place
without eating or drinking anything.

The following day he wandered about until afternoon before he broke his
fast. He ate a mouthful of willow twigs and took a taste of water. He
walked leisurely down the mountain and towards sundown made himself a
nest at the foot of a cliff in the woods. Here he remained, apparently
sleeping, until late the next afternoon. Then, just before sundown, he
walked out a short distance, smelled of a number of things, licked the
snow a few times, and returned to his nest.

The fourth day he went early for water and ate more willow twigs. In the
afternoon he came upon a dead bird,--apparently a junco,--which he ate.
After another drink he lay down at the foot of a tree for the night. The
following morning he drank freely of water, surprised and devoured a
rabbit, and then lay down. He slept until noon the next day, then set
out foraging; he found a dead mouse and toward evening caught another
rabbit. The seventh day was much like the preceding one. During the
first week out the grizzly did not eat food enough to make him one
ordinary meal.

Hibernation is not well understood. The habit probably originated from
the scarcity of food. However, in Mexico grizzlies sometimes hibernate
even though the climate be mild and food plentiful. As these grizzlies
probably came from the cold north, the habit may have been fixed in the
species when it arrived. Hibernation appears to be helpful and not
harmful, and it may therefore continue for ages even though not
required. The rest which hibernation gives to mind and stomach, with the
entire organism relaxed, may both increase efficiency and lengthen life.

The polar bear has its own peculiar hibernating-habits. The food of this
bear is sea food. This is available even in the winter-time, on or
beneath the ice. The male polar bears do not hibernate; the females do
not except when about to give birth to young. The cubs at birth are
small and helpless, and require the mother's constant care and the
shelter of the den for some weeks after birth.

Mr. J. D. Figgins has written one of the best comments on hibernation
that I have read. I quote as follows:--

    "The period of hibernation in any mammal not only varies in a given
    species, but is largely influenced by the available supply of food
    to which it is accustomed or that is necessary for its requirements.

    "Examples of this character may be cited among several species of
    mammals. It is the custom of the chipmunks, or 'ground squirrels,'
    to hoard up at least a partial supply of food in the autumn for
    consumption during the winter months; but this is rarely, if ever,
    sufficient to keep these interesting little animals active for the
    entire period. In most localities, there is no available food with
    which to augment their scant store and they are never in evidence
    from late October to April. In other locations where the fruit of
    the Cratægus, or 'thorn apple,' is to be had, they may be seen
    almost daily, although the ground may be covered with several feet
    of snow and low temperatures prevail.

    "Another example is the opossum. Ordinarily these animals are active
    throughout the entire year, but towards the northern edge of their
    range they frequently hibernate for considerable periods (thirty-one
    days from personal observations).

    "Certain of the small rodents can, and probably do, hoard sufficient
    food for actual need during the winter months; but the problem is
    in direct ratio to the size of the animal. Hence we find the marmot,
    a much larger animal, making no provision, although his habitat is
    confined to the higher altitudes and his period of hibernation is
    extended over a greater length of time than many other species. His
    food consists wholly of grass and other green plants, and it is
    doubtful if he could subsist on dry food. Granting that he could,
    the amount required would be prohibitive, otherwise he would make
    some effort in that direction, as do the conies, a much smaller
    animal.

    "Being omnivorous and of great size, a bear could not secure or
    preserve the necessary amount of food to carry him through five
    months. Such food could not consist of any variety other than
    vegetation, and he is not a 'hay' eater, and so, nature has provided
    him a means of surviving the long period of fasting and probably,
    without discomfort.

    "It is well known that bears show a distinct preference for fruit
    during the late summer and autumn months. Not because that is the
    season for the various fruits, but through a need of their sugar
    content and its fattening qualities. Composed largely of juices
    which are quickly absorbed, the digestive process is very brief and
    the discarded residue is discharged at once. This may give rise to
    the belief that a purgative has been employed as a means of
    cleansing the bowels and explains the presence of unbroken berries
    in the excrement and the absence of offensive odors. As a means of
    exploding the purgative theory we need only refer to bears in
    captivity. Although the latter may be confined to cement floors and
    have no access to any matter whatever, other than the food regularly
    supplied, they frequently hibernate in a quite orderly manner.

    "It must be conceded that bears are irregular in the period of
    'holing up' and that they do so only when food has become too scarce
    to sustain activities without a drain upon the store of fat they
    have acquired; or during very severe weather. In the mean time there
    has been a gradual reduction in food as the period of hibernation
    approaches and a consequent lessened activity of the bowels. Nor is
    there reason for surprise because of the absence of excrement in the
    burrow and the presence of matter in the rectum when the bear
    emerges in the spring.

    "In captivity bears may, or may not, hibernate. As a rule they
    'sleep' for more or less varying periods during severe weather. One
    authority states the grizzly has been known to sleep from sixty to
    seventy-five days and during that time it was not difficult to
    awaken him. Black bears frequently pass the winter without evidence
    of even drowsiness. Others awake at irregular intervals, and after
    feeding lightly, return to their slumber."

The winter life of many animals is stern and strange. During the autumn
the beaver stores up a food-supply for use when the pond is closed over
with ice. The cony harvests hay for his winter food. Numbers of animals
hunt food each day in the snow. But the woodchuck and the bear
hibernate, that is, they fast and sleep in a den during the winter.




Being Good to Bears


On the slope of Long's Peak one June morning I came upon two tiny
grizzly bear cubs. Each was about the size of a cottontail rabbit--a
lively little ball of fur, dark gray, almost black, in color.

Knowing that their mother had recently been killed, I thought I would
capture them and bring them up properly. But they did not want to be
brought up properly! We had a lively chase, dodging among the bowlders
and trees. Cornering them at last among the fallen logs, I grabbed one.
He did the same to me. His teeth were as sharp as needles and almost as
sharp were his lively claws. It was some time before I could tear myself
loose. He kept a mouthful of my trousers. At last I deposited the
fighting little fellow in the bottom of a sack. The other cub scratched
and chewed me up and tore my clothes; but I forced it also into the
sack. Two grizzly bears in the same sack! any one should have known
better!

I started to conduct them personally to my cabin, two miles away. In
descending a steep moraine with the sack over my shoulder I slipped and
shook the sack more than any sack should have been shaken that contained
two bears. Of course, they started to fight. One bit through the sack
and bit the wrong bear. I finally reached my cabin with a long pole over
my shoulder. Tied to the south end of the pole was a sack full of
grizzly bears.

I shook the cubs out of the sack in front of a basin of milk and thrust
their faces deeply into it. Not having eaten for three days, they were
"as hungry as bears" and needed no explanation concerning the milk. They
had eager, cunning little faces, and were pets before sundown. In
twenty-four hours Jenny knew that her name was Jenny, and Johnny that
his was Johnny. After a few days they followed me about with fondness
and loyalty.

  [Illustration: JENNY (STANDING UP) AND JOHNNY
    _In the First Year of their Lives_]

These bears responded to kind treatment and were of cheerful
disposition. I made it a point never to annoy or tease them. The grizzly
bear is an exceedingly sensitive animal, and annoyances or cruelty make
him cross. Once in addressing an audience concerning wild life I made
the statement that bears would be good to us if we were good to them.
A small boy instantly asked, "What do you do to be good to bears?" The
health and the temper of bears, as well as of people, are easily ruined
by improper food.

Young bear cubs are the most wide-awake and observing little people that
I know of. Never have I seen a horse or dog who understood as readily or
learned as rapidly as these two bears. One day I offered Johnny a saucer
of milk. He was impatient to get it. Reaching up, he succeeded in
spilling it, but he licked the saucer with satisfaction. On the second
try he spilled only a part of the milk. On the third trial he clasped
the saucer deftly in his two fore paws, lifted it upwards, turned his
head back and poured the milk into his mouth.

When Johnny and Jenny were growing up, it seemed as if nothing unusual
escaped them. A bright button, a flash of a ring, a white handkerchief,
or an unusual movement or sound instantly caught their attention. They
concentrated on each new object and endeavored to find out what it was.
Having satisfied their curiosity or obtained full information about it,
the next instant they were ready to concentrate on something else. But
they remembered on second appearance anything which had especially
interested them at any time. They learned through careful observation.

For a time they were not chained and had the freedom of the yard. Never
have I seen two young animals more intense, more playful, or more
energetic. They played alone, they mauled each other by the hour, and
occasionally they scrapped. Sometimes we ran foot-races. From a scratch
upon the ground, at the word "go," we would race down hill about one
hundred and fifty yards. They were eager for these races and always
ready to line up with me. They were so speedy that in every race they
merrily turned around at least twice to see if I was coming, and in
those days I was not slow.

Johnny and Jenny enjoyed playing with people, with any one who did not
annoy them. Among the strangers who came was a man who made friends at
once and had a good romp. When he left them and went to lunch, Johnny
and Jenny followed and lay down near the door where he had disappeared.
As he came out, they rose up and started another romp.

To attract my attention or to ask for something to eat, Johnny or Jenny
would stand on hind legs and hold out fore paws like an orator. If I
came around the corner of the house a quarter of a mile away, they
instantly stood on tiptoe and gesticulated with enthusiasm. They were
the life of my home, and occasionally almost the death of it.

It was almost impossible to get these cubs filled up. They ate
everything,--scraps from the table, rhubarb, dandelions, bitter sage,
and bark,--but they were especially fond of apples. If I approached with
meat and honey upon a plate but with apples or turnips in my pockets,
they would ignore the plate and, clinching me, thrust their noses into
my pockets to find the promised treat.

One August evening I brought in a cluster of wild raspberries for Johnny
and Jenny. While still more than a hundred feet from the cabin, both
bears leaped to their feet, scented the air, and came racing to meet me
with more than their ordinary enthusiasm. No child of frontier parents
could have shown more interest in a candy package on the father's return
from the city than did Johnny and Jenny in those berries.

A number of people were waiting in my cabin to see me. The little bears
and I crowded in. I handed Jenny a berry-laden spray, and then one to
Johnny, alternating until they were equally divided. Standing erect,
each held the cluster under the left forearm by pressing it against the
chest. When browsing in a raspberry-patch bears commonly bite off the
tops of the canes together with the leaves and the berries. Johnny and
Jenny ate more daintily. One berry was plucked off at a time with two
front claws and dropped into the mouth. As one berry followed another,
the lips were smacked, and the face and every movement made expressed
immense satisfaction at the taste.

Every one crowded close to watch the performance. In the jostling one of
the berry-laden canes fell to the floor. Both little bears grabbed for
it at the same instant. They butted heads, lost their temper, and began
to fight over it. I grabbed them by the collars and shook them.

"Why, Johnny and Jenny," I said, "why do you do this? And such awful
manners when we have company! What shall I do with you?"

They instantly stopped quarreling and even forgot the berries. For
several seconds the little bears were embarrassed beyond all measure.
They simply stared at the floor. Then suddenly each appeared to have the
same idea. Standing erect, facing each other, they put fore paws on each
other's shoulders, and went "Ungh, ah, oooo." Plainly they were very
sorry that they had misbehaved.

The manner in which these cubs received the berries, the fact that the
first time they saw mushrooms they scented them at some distance and
raced for them, also that on other occasions they went out of their way
to get a plant ordinarily liked by the grizzly, led me to think that
they inherited a taste for a number of things that grizzlies commonly
eat.

One day we were out walking, when we came upon an army of ants. Without
the least hesitation Johnny and Jenny followed along the line, licking
them up. Upon reaching the stone behind which the ants were
disappearing, Johnny thrust one fore claw under it and flung it aside. I
was astonished at his strength.

I tried not to teach Johnny or Jenny any trick, but encouraged them to
develop any original stunt or individuality of their own. One day Jenny
was attracted by a big green fly that alighted on Johnny. She struck at
it; the fly relighted and she struck again. With a little effort I
succeeded in getting the bears to shoo flies off each other, and
sometimes they were both busy at the same time. It made a comical show,
especially when one was lazily lying down and the other was shooing with
eagerness and solemnity.

Another activity I encouraged was the bear's habit of holding the other
around the neck with one fore paw and rubbing or scratching the back of
the bear's head with his other paw. In a short time both bears, while
facing each other, would go through the performance at the same time.

Like other children Johnny and Jenny were fond of water and spent much
time rolling and wading in the brook by their shed. This was a play they
enjoyed. I showed interest in having them roll and splash in the
liveliest manner possible.

Johnny seemed unusually interested in what I was doing one day and
imitated in succession a number of my performances. I had dropped a
penny on the floor, and then, stooping over, touched it with the end of
one finger and moved it rapidly about. He rose on his hind feet, held up
one claw, then, stooping, put this upon the penny and moved it rapidly
about. Blowing the yolk out of an egg, I held up the empty shell before
him, and then proceeded to move it rapidly about on the floor with the
point of one finger. After licking the shell Johnny imitated my every
act without crushing the shell.

While Jenny was asleep on the grass, I placed a large umbrella over her.
When she opened her eyes, she at once commenced a quiet though
frightened study of the strange thing. She closed one eye, turned her
head to one side, and looked up into it; then, turning her head, closed
the other eye for a look. A sudden puff of wind gave life to the
umbrella and this in turn to Jenny. She made a desperate dash to escape
the mysterious monster. The wind whirled the umbrella before her and she
landed in it. Wrecking the umbrella, she fled in terror, bellowing with
every jump. It took more than an hour to explain matters and assure
Jenny that I had not been playing any tricks.

Scotch, my short-nosed collie, was with me when Johnny and Jenny were
growing up. Johnny and Scotch were fond of each other, and though each
was a little jealous of the master's attention to the other, they got
along admirably. Ofttimes they wrestled, and sometimes in their rough
and tumble they played pretty roughly. As a climax often Scotch would
aim for a neck-hold on Johnny and hammer him on the tip of his sensitive
nose with one fore paw, while Johnny if possible would seize Scotch's
tail in his mouth and shut down on it with his needle-like teeth.

One of the most interesting pranks which they played on each other was
over a bone. Scotch was enjoying this, when he discovered Johnny
watching him eagerly. Plainly Johnny wanted that bone. After a little
while Scotch leaped to his feet, looked off in the direction beyond
Johnny and barked, as though some object of interest was coming from
that direction. Then, picking up the bone, he walked away. As he passed
in front of Johnny he dropped the bone and gave a bark. Going on a short
distance, he barked once or twice more and lay down watching this
pretended object in the distance. Johnny was more interested in the
bone, but Scotch had dropped this a foot or two beyond his reach,
chained as he was. For some time Johnny stood with his nose pointing at
the bone, apparently thinking deeply as to how he might reach it. At
last, stretching his chain to the utmost he reached out with his right
arm. But he could not touch it. Although realizing that he probably
could not reach it with the left arm, nevertheless he tried.

All this time Scotch was watching Johnny out of the corner of his eye
and plainly enjoyed his failures. Johnny stood looking at the bone;
Scotch continued looking at Johnny. Suddenly Johnny had an idea. He
wheeled about, reached back with his hind foot and knocked the bone
forward where he could pick it up with fore paws. Scotch, astonished,
leaped to his feet and walked off without a bark or once looking back.

When Johnny and Jenny were small they often reminded me of a little boy
and a little girl. Ofttimes they would follow me into my cabin. If I sat
down they would come close, stand on hind legs, put fore paws on my
knees, and look up at me. They would play with my watch-string, peep
into my pockets, notice my pencil, or look at the buttons on my coat.
Sometimes they would make a round of the room, scrutinize an unusual
knot in a log, or stop to look for several seconds at the books in the
shelves or the last magazine-cover. Then again, like children, they
would walk round the room, tap with their fore paws here and there, and
hurry on as children do. More than once they climbed up into my lap,
twitched my ears, touched my nose, played with my hair, and finally fell
off to sleep, one on each arm.

One day, while I was carrying Johnny in my arms, it occurred to me that
he would enjoy a big rocking-chair. I placed him in a chair with one
fore paw on each arm. He sat up like a little old man. As I started the
chair rocking, he showed his suspicion and alarm by excitedly peering
over, first at one rocker and then the other. Presently he calmed down
and seemed to enjoy the movement. By and by he caught the swing and
rocked himself. Suddenly the little old man and the rocker went over
backward. Seeing his angry look as he struck the floor, I leaped upon
the centre table. Getting on his feet, he struck a blow that barely
missed me and then made lively bites at my ankles. He blamed me for the
law of falling bodies. After a few seconds he was as playful as ever,
remembering that I had never played any tricks on him, and realizing
that I was not to blame for what had happened.

These little bears grew rapidly. At the age of seven months Johnny
weighed approximately sixty pounds, and Jenny forty-six.

Numerous visitors and the increasing size of the cubs at last compelled
me to chain them. The little bears were almost always on the move,
either pacing back and forth or circling. Their long chains often got
tangled with sticks, grass, or bushes. Sometimes the cubs showed
impatience, but usually they carefully examined the chain, then, taking
it in their fore paws, stepped this way and that and generally made the
very move needed to extricate or unwind it. While doing this they
appeared almost comical because of their serious and concentrated
attention.

One morning Johnny climbed to the top of the pole fence to which he was
chained. With happy, playful activity he galloped atop the pole to the
end of the chain; then, like an engine, he reversed his direction
without turning and went hippety-hop back again. This was a favorite
exercise of Johnny's, a game which I had encouraged; but this morning
while having a beautiful time he tumbled off backward. The chain caught
in a knot and Johnny found himself hung. Grizzly bears resent being hung
by the neck. Johnny quickly kicked himself out of his collar. Finding
himself free, and thinking himself abused, I suppose, he ran away. After
three days this runaway boy concluded to come home. I saw him come out
of the woods into an opening on the mountain-side. Even at a distance I
could see that he no longer possessed the big round stomach that he
took away. I went to meet him. He was interested in the food question,
and long before he reached me he was dancing about with outstretched
arms.

In the midst of this performance it occurred to him that if he wanted
anything to eat he must hurry to me. So he checked his first impulse and
started to carry his second into instant effect. These incomplete
proceedings interrupted and tripped each other three or four times and
mixed themselves together. Apparently an entangled mental process
followed my appearance. Though he tumbled about in comic confusion while
trying to do two things at once, it was evident through it all that his
central idea was to get something to eat.

One September we went camping out in Wild Basin, Johnny and Jenny racing
along as happy as two boys. Sometimes they were ahead of me, sometimes
behind; occasionally they stopped to wrestle and box. At night they lay
close to me beside the camp-fire. Often I used one of them for a pillow,
and more than once I awoke to find that they were using me for one.

  [Illustration: JENNY (ON THE LEFT) AND JOHNNY
    _At the Age of Fourteen_]

As we were climbing along the top of a moraine, a black bear and her two
cubs came within perhaps thirty feet of us. They saw or scented us.
The cubs and their mother bristled up and ran off terribly frightened,
while Johnny and Jenny only a short distance in front of me, walked on,
both ludicrously pretending that they had not seen the black bears.
Surely they were touched with aristocracy!

The man in charge of my place neither understood nor sympathized with
wide-awake and aggressive young grizzlies, and once, when I was away, he
teased Johnny. The inevitable crash came and the man went to the
hospital. On another occasion he set a pan of sour milk on the ground
before Jenny. Bears learn to like sour milk, but Jenny had not learned
and she sourly sniffed at it. The man roared, "Drink it," and kicked her
in the ribs. Again we had to send for the ambulance.

At last it appeared best to send Johnny and Jenny to the Denver Zoo. Two
years went by before I allowed myself the pleasure of visiting them. A
number of other bears were with them in a large pen when I leaped in,
calling "Hello, Johnny!" as I did so. Johnny jumped up fully awake,
stood erect, extended both arms, and gave a few joyful grunts in the way
of greeting. Back among the other bears stood Jenny on tiptoe, eagerly
looking on.




Trailing without a Gun


I had gone into Wild Basin, hoping to see and to trail a grizzly. It was
early November and the sun shone brightly on four inches of newly fallen
snow; trailing conditions were excellent. If possible I wanted to get
close to a bear and watch his ways for a day or two.

Just as I climbed above the last trees on the eastern slope of the
Continental Divide, I saw a grizzly ambling along the other side of a
narrow cañon, boldly outlined against the sky-line. I was so near that
with my field-glasses I recognized him as "Old Timberline," a bear with
two right front toes missing. He was a silver-tip,--a nearly white old
bear. For three days I followed Old Timberline through his home
territory and camped on his trail at night. I had with me hatchet,
kodak, field-glasses, and a package of food, but no gun.

The grizzly had disappeared by the time I crossed the cañon, but a clear
line of tracks led westward. I followed them over the Divide and down
into the woods on the other side. In a scattered tree-growth the tracks
turned abruptly to the right, then led back eastward, close to the first
line of tracks, as though Old Timberline had turned to meet any one who
might be following him.

The most impressive thing I had early learned in trailing and studying
the grizzly was that a wounded bear if trailed and harassed will
sometimes conceal himself and lie in an ambush in wait for his pursuer.
I never took a chance of walking into such danger. Whenever the trail
passed a log, bowlder, or bushes that might conceal a bear, I turned
aside and scouted the ambush for a side view before advancing further.

Old Timberline's tracks showed that he had now and then risen on hind
feet, listened, and turned to look back. He acted as though he knew I
was following him, but this he had not yet discovered. All grizzlies are
scouts of the first order; they are ever on guard. When at rest their
senses do continuous sentinel duty, and when traveling they act exactly
as though they believed some man was in pursuit.

Following along the trail and wondering what turn the grizzly would make
next, I found where he had climbed upon a ledge in the edge of an
opening, and had evidently stood for some seconds, looking and
listening. From the ledge he had faced about and continued his course
westward, heading for a spur on the summit of the Divide.

We were in what is now the southern end of the Rocky Mountain National
Park. The big bear and myself were on one of the high sky-lines of the
earth. We traversed a territory ten thousand to twelve thousand feet
above sea-level, much of it above the limits of tree growth. There were
long stretches of moorland, an occasional peak towering above us, and
ridges long and short thrusting east and west, and cañons of varying
width and depth were to be seen below us from the summit heights.

Crossing this spur of the Divide, the grizzly entered the woods. Here he
spent so much time rolling logs about and tearing them open for grubs
and ants that I nearly caught up with him. I watched him through the
scattered trees from a rocky ledge until he moved on. This after a few
minutes he did. As he came to an opening in the woods, I wondered
whether he would go round it to the right or to the left. To my
astonishment, without the least hesitation he sauntered across the
opening, his head held low and swinging easily from side to side. But
the instant he was screened by trees beyond, rising up, with fore paws
resting against a tree, he peered cautiously out to see if he was being
followed. When the next opening in the woods was reached, he went
discreetly round it. You never know what a grizzly's next move will be
nor how to anticipate his actions.

Old Timberline started down into a cañon as though to descend a gully
diagonally to the bottom. I hastily made a short cut and was ready to
take his picture when he should come out at the lower end. But he never
came. After waiting some time, I back-tracked and found he had gone only
a few hundred feet down the gully, then returned to the top of the cañon
and followed along the rim for a mile. He had then descended directly to
the bottom of the cañon and gone straight up to the top on the other
side.

Autumn is the time when bears most search the heights for food. Old
Timberline's trail headed again for the heights. When I next caught
sight of him, he was digging above the tree-line, but as it was now
nearly night, I went back a short distance into the woods and built a
fire by the base of a cliff. Here all through the clear night I had a
glorious view of the high peaks up among the cold stars.

Before daylight I left camp and climbed to the top of a treeless ridge,
thinking that the bear might come along that way. In the course of time
he appeared, about a quarter of a mile east of me. After standing and
looking about for a few minutes, he started along the ridge, evidently
planning to recross the Continental Divide near where he had crossed the
day before. As I could not get close to him from this point, I concluded
to follow his trail of the preceding night and if possible find out what
he had been doing.

A short distance below him I found his trail and back-tracked to a place
which showed that he had spent the night near the entrance of a recently
dug den. I learned some weeks later that this den was where he
hibernated that winter. A short distance farther on I came to where he
had been digging when I saw him the evening before. Evidently he had
been successful. A few drops of blood on the snow showed that he had
captured some small animal, probably a cony. From this point I trailed
Old Timberline forward and eastward, and near noon I caught a glimpse of
him on the summit of the Divide.

While roaming above timber-line he did not take the precaution to
travel with his face in the wind. He could see toward every point of the
compass. He was ambling easily along, but I knew that his senses were
wide awake--that his sentinel nose never slept and that his ears never
ceased to hear. Climbing to the very summit of a snow-covered ridge, he
lay down with his back to the wind. Evidently he depended upon the wind
to carry the warning scent of any danger behind him, while he was on the
lookout for anything in front of him. Nothing could approach nearer than
half a mile without his knowing it. He looked this way and that. After
only a short rest he arose and started on again.

I hoped that some time I should be able to photograph Old Timberline at
twenty-five or thirty feet. But at all times, too, I was more eager to
watch him, to see what he was eating, where he went, and what he did. I
was constantly trying to get as close as possible. Of course I had ever
to keep in mind that he must not see, hear, nor scent me. I had to be
particularly careful to prevent his scenting me. Often in hastening to
reach a point of vantage I had to stop, note the topography, and change
my direction, because a wind-current up an unsuspected cañon before me
might carry news of my presence to the bear.

Near mountain-tops the wind is deflected this way and that by ridges and
cañons. In a small area the prevailing west wind may be a north wind,
and a short distance farther on it may blow from the southwest. Often,
when the bear was somewhere in a cañon, I climbed entirely out of it, to
avoid the likelihood of being scented, and scurried ahead on a plateau.

Usually I followed in the bear's trail, but sometimes I made short cuts.
So long as Old Timberline remained on the moorland summit of this
treeless ridge, I could not get close to him. But when he arose and
started down the ridge, I hurried down the slope, hoping to get ahead
and hide in a place of concealment near which he might pass. I kept out
of sight in the woods and hastened forward for two miles, then climbed
up and hid in a rock-slide on the rim of the ridge.

By and by I saw Old Timberline coming. When within five hundred feet of
me he stopped and dug energetically. Buckets of earth flew behind, and
occasionally a huge stone was torn out and hurled with one paw to the
right or left. Once he stopped digging, rose on hind feet, and looked
all around as though he felt that some one was slipping up on him. He
dug for a few minutes longer and then again stood up and sniffed the
air. Not satisfied, he walked quickly to a ledge from which he could see
down the slope to the woods. Discovering nothing suspicious, he returned
to his digging, stepping in his former footprints. He uncovered
something in its nest, and through my glasses I saw him strike right and
left and then rush out in pursuit of it. After nosing about in the hole
where he had been digging, he started off again. He went directly to the
ledge, walking in his former well-tracked trail, then descended the
steep eastern slope of the Divide toward the woods. I hurried to the
ledge from which he had surveyed the surroundings and watched him.

Arriving at a steep incline on the snowy slope, Old Timberline sat down
on his haunches and coasted. A grizzly bear coasting on the Continental
Divide! How merrily he went, leaning forward with his paws on his knees!
At one place he plunged over a snowy ledge and dropped four or five
feet. He threw up both fore paws with sheer joy. Soon he found himself
exceeding the speed-limit. Looking back over one shoulder, and reaching
out his paw behind him, he put on brakes; but as this did not check him
sufficiently, he whirled about and slid flat on his stomach, digging in
with both fingers and toes until he slowed down.

Then, sitting up on his haunches again, he set himself in motion by
pushing along with rapid backward strokes of both fore paws. He coasted
on toward the bottom. In going down a steep pitch of one hundred feet or
more he either quite lost control of himself or let go from sheer
enthusiasm. He rolled, tumbled, and slid recklessly along. Reaching the
bottom, he rose on hind feet, looked about him for a few seconds, and
then climbed halfway up the course for another coast. At the end of this
merry sliding he landed on an open flat in the edge of the woods.

As it was nearly dark and I should not be able to see or follow the bear
much longer, I concluded to roll a rock from the ledge down near him.
Twice I had noticed that he had paid no attention to rocks that broke
loose above and rolled near him. But he heard this rock start and rose
up to look at it. It stopped a few yards from him. He sniffed the air
with nose pointing toward it and then went up and smelled it. Rearing
up instantly, he looked intently toward the mountain-top where I was
hidden. After two or three seconds of thought he turned and ran.
Evidently the stone had carried my scent to him. It was useless to
follow him in the night.

The next morning I left camp and followed Old Timberline's trail through
the woods. He had run for nearly ten miles almost straight south until
coming to a small stream. Then for some distance he concealed, involved,
and confused his trail with a cleverness that I have never seen equaled.
Most animals realize that they leave a scent which enables other animals
to follow them, but the grizzly is the only animal that I know who
appears to be fully aware that he is leaving telltale tracks. He will
make unthought-of turns and doublings to walk where his tracks will not
show, and also tramples about to leave a confusion of tracks where they
do show.

Arriving at the stream, the bear crossed on a fallen log and from the
end of this leaped into a bushy growth beyond. I made a détour, thinking
to find his tracks on the other side of the bushes, and I threw stones
into the bushes, not caring to go into them. Both tracks and grizzly
seemed to have vanished. I went down stream just outside the bushes
bordering it, expecting every instant to find the grizzly's tracks, but
not finding them. Then I returned to the log on which he had crossed the
stream, and from which he had leaped into the bushes.

Examining the tracks carefully, I now discovered what I had before
overlooked. After leaping into the bushes the bear had faced about and
leaped back to the log, stepping carefully into his former tracks. From
the log he had entered the water and waded up stream for a quarter of a
mile. Of course not a track showed. At a good place for concealing his
trail he had leaped out of the water into a clump of willows on the
north bank. From the willows he made another long leap into the snow and
then started back northward, alongside his ten-mile trail and one
hundred feet from it, as though intending to return to the place where I
had rolled the stone down the slope near him.

I did not discover all this at once, however. In my search for his trail
I went up stream on the north side and passed, without noticing, the
crushed willows into which he had leaped. Crossing to where the bank was
higher, I started back down stream on the other side, and in doing so
chanced to look across and see the crushed clump of willows. But it took
me hours to untangle this involved trail.

When I had followed the tracks northward for more than a mile, the trail
vanished in a snowless place. Apparently the grizzly had planned in
advance to use this bare place, because the moves he made in it were
those most likely to bewilder the pursuer. He did three things which are
always more or less confusing and even bewildering to the pursuer, be he
man or dog. He changed his direction, he left no tracks, and he crossed
his former trail, thereby mixing the scents of the two. He confused the
nose, left no record for the eye, and broke the general direction.

Unable to determine the course the bear had taken across this trackless
place, I walked round it, keeping all the time in the snow. When more
than halfway round I came upon his tracks leaving the bare place. Here
he had changed his direction of travel abruptly from north to east,
crossed his former trail, gone on a few yards farther, and then abruptly
changed from east to north.

I hurried along his tracks. After a few miles I saw where perhaps the
night before he had eaten part of the carcass of a bighorn. To judge
from tooth marks, the sheep had been killed by wolves. The trail
continued in general northward, parallel to the summit and a little
below it. As I followed, the tracks approached timber-line, the trees
being scattered and the country quite open.

Suddenly the trail broke off to the right for five or six hundred feet
into the woods, as though Old Timberline had remembered an acquaintance
whom he must see again. He had hustled along straight for a much-clawed
Engelmann spruce, a tree with bear-claw and tooth marks of many dates,
though none were recent. Old Timberline, apparently, had smelled the
base of the tree and then risen up and sniffed the bark as high as his
nose could reach. He had neither bitten nor clawed. Then he had gone to
two near-by trees, each of which had had chunks bitten or torn out, and
here smelled about.

Retracing his tracks to where the trail had turned off abruptly, the
bear resumed his general direction northward. When he stopped on a ridge
and began digging, I hurried across a narrow neck of woods and crept up
as close as I dared. A wagon-load of dirt and stones had been piled
up. While I watched the digging, a woodchuck rushed out, only to be
overtaken and seized by the bear, who, having finished his meal,
shuffled on out of sight.

I followed the trail through woods, groves, and openings. After an hour
or more without seeing the grizzly, I climbed a cliff, hoping to get a
glimpse of him on some ridge ahead. I could see his line of tracks
crossing a low ridge beyond and felt that he might still be an hour or
so in the lead. But, in descending from the cliff, I chanced to look
back along my trail. Just at that moment the bear came out of the woods
behind me. He was trailing me!

I do not know how he discovered that I was following him. He may have
seen or scented me. Anyway, instead of coming directly back and thus
exposing himself, he had very nearly carried out his well-planned
surprise when I discovered him. I found out afterwards that he had left
his trail far ahead, turning and walking back in his own footprints for
a distance, and trampling this stretch a number of times, and that he
had then leaped into scrubby timber and made off on the side where his
tracks did not show in passing along the trampled trail. He had
confused his trail where he started to circle back, so as not to be
noticed, and slipped in around behind me.

But after discovering the grizzly on my trail I went slowly along as
though I was unaware of his near presence, turning in screened places to
look back. He followed within three hundred feet of me. When I stopped
he stopped. He occasionally watched me from behind bushes, a tree, or a
bowlder. It gave me a strange feeling to have this big beast following
and watching me so closely and cautiously. But I was not alarmed.

I concluded to turn tables on him. On crossing a ridge where I was out
of sight, I turned to the right and ran for nearly a mile. Then,
circling back into our old trail behind the bear, I traveled serenely
along, imagining that he was far ahead. I was suddenly startled to see a
movement of the grizzly's shadow from behind a bowlder near the trail,
only three hundred feet ahead. He was in ambush, waiting for me! At the
place where I left the trail to circle behind him, he had stopped and
evidently surmised my movements. Turning in his tracks, he had come a
short distance back on the trail and lain down behind the bowlder to
wait for me.

I went on a few steps after discovering the grizzly, and he moved to
keep out of sight. I edged toward a tall spruce, which I planned to
climb if he charged, feeling safe in the knowledge that grizzlies cannot
climb trees. Pausing by the spruce, I could see his silver-gray fur as
he peered at me from behind the bowlder, and as I moved farther away I
heard him snapping his jaws and snarling as though in anger at being
outwitted.

Just what he would have done had I walked into his ambush can only be
guessed. Hunters trailing a wounded grizzly have been ambushed and
killed. But this grizzly had not even been shot at nor harassed.

Generally, when a grizzly discovers that he is followed, or even if he
only thinks himself followed, he at once hurries off to some other part
of his territory, as this one did after I rolled the stone. But Old
Timberline on finding himself followed slipped round to follow me. Often
a grizzly, if he feels he is not yet seen,--that his move is
unsuspected,--will slip round to follow those who are trailing him. But
in no other case that I know of has a bear lingered after he realized
that he was seen. After Old Timberline discovered that I had circled
behind him, he knew that I knew where he was and what he was doing.

But instead of running away he came back along the trail to await my
coming. What were his intentions? Did he intend to assault me, or was he
overcome with curiosity because of my unusual actions and trying to
discover what they were all about? I do not know. I concluded it best
not to follow him farther, nor did I wish to travel that night with this
crafty, soft-footed fellow in the woods. Going a short distance down
among the trees, I built a rousing fire. Between it and a cliff I spent
the night, satisfied that I had had adventure enough for one outing.

Trailing is adventurous. Many of the best lessons of woodcraft that I
have learned, several of the greatest and most beneficial outings that I
have had, were those during which I followed, sometimes day and night,
that master of strategy, the grizzly bear. A few times in trailing the
grizzly I have outwitted him, but more frequently he has outwitted me.
Every grizzly has speed, skill, and endurance. He has mental capacity
and often shows astounding plan, caution, courage, and audacity.

Trailing without a gun is red-blooded life, scouting of the most
exacting and manly order. The trailer loses himself in his part in the
primeval play of the wilderness. It is doubtful if any other experience
is as educational as the trailing of the grizzly bear.




When the Grizzly Plays


One of the best play-exhibitions that I have ever enjoyed was that of a
grizzly juggling with an eight-foot log in a mountain stream. In
examining the glaciation of the Continental Divide, five or six miles
west of Long's Peak, I came out of the woods into a little meadow by the
East Inlet of Grand Lake, where I saw the grizzly and the log, rolling
and tumbling in the water. The log bobbed and plunged about as the bear
struggled with it in the swift current.

The big, shaggy grizzly, wild and gray, fitted into the wild mountain
scene. A peak bristling with ledges and dotted with snow towered in the
blue sky behind. Down the steep incline of the peak the clear, cold
stream came with subdued roar, as it rushed the inclines and the rapids
of its solid rock-cut channel. The opposite wall of the cañon was of
glacier-polished granite, while behind me the wall rose steeply, covered
with a crowded growth of towering spruce. It was a grand wilderness
playground.

As I watched from the edge of the woods, the grizzly once hugged the log
between fore paws, stood it on end in the water, and then tried to climb
it. His weight caused it to tip him over. The log escaped from the bear
and started to float away, but he was after it with a rush.

Another time he lay across it and splashed about like a boy on a pole
trying to learn to swim. Getting too far forward, he rolled under the
log. Struggling on his back, he grasped it between all four feet. Then
he took it beneath one forearm and suddenly ducked it into deep water.
It shot out into the middle of the stream with the bear splashing wildly
in pursuit. At last he succeeded in securing a good hold with his teeth
and was tugging the log toward the bank when he saw a stick floating
down stream. As he turned to seize it, his wave pushed the stick farther
away and at the same time gave the log a start down stream. Turning from
the stick, he hurried to seize the log. Pushing it end on against the
rocky bank, and pressing against it with one fore paw, he looked over
his shoulder as though intending to seize the stick. But this was out of
reach, hurrying down stream.

  [Illustration: CATCHING BLACK BEAR CUBS]

Next he appeared to be trying to walk the log. When he was almost on it,
the log rolled and with a splash the grizzly fell into the water on his
side. For a second he lost sight of the log, or pretended that he had,
and took swift glances this way and that. As it bumped into his
up-stream side, he seized it with feigned surprise. Then he took it to
the bank in shallow water, mauling it about, biting and gnawing at it.
As the log rolled from side to side, he swam around it, batting it and
pushing it under.

A number of Clarke nutcrackers and magpies had collected and in
astonishment watched the exhibition. Ordinarily a nutcracker is noisy in
autumn, screaming and chuckling loudly and harshly. But these were
motionless and silent as they watched. A passing magpie whirled aside to
see the show, and was just alighting on the bank when the bear splashed
water wildly with a sweeping stroke at the log. With confused haste the
magpie retreated. Taking a stand on a solitary spruce which leaned over
the bank, he watched the scene without a move. The other birds, equally
intent, watched from a high-water log-jam among large near-by bowlders.

At last the grizzly secured the log just under water. Standing upon it
with hind feet, he reached down with both fore paws and went through an
up-and-down motion like a washerwoman. Then he left the log and walked
along the bank, keeping watch of it as it floated slowly down stream. It
gradually pulled off from the bank. When it was about ten feet away he
leaped playfully after it with feet outspread like those of a flying
squirrel. Letting it drift again, he watched it intently as it was swept
into the current and floated away in midstream. By swimming and wading
he kept alongside for some distance, then put one fore paw upon it.
Perhaps he was about to start something new, but just then he scented
something over his right shoulder.

Releasing the log, he climbed upon a bowlder that projected above the
water. On hind feet, interested and curious, he stood gazing for some
seconds. Evidently desiring more information, he started ashore and
never looked back at the log hurrying away down the rapids.

I found afterwards that the grizzly had rolled the log into the water a
short distance up stream from where I came upon him. The log was a
sound section of a spruce that had broken off when the tree fell among
bowlders and lay on the bank a few feet from the water. The bear had
come down stream, and in passing ten or twelve feet from the log had
turned aside to it. He may have rolled it over to see if there were
insects beneath, but, accidentally or intentionally, he had rolled it
into the water.

This play of a grizzly with an object is much less common than their
other play, such as coasting. Several times I have seen grizzlies lying
on their stomachs sliding down a steep, smooth, grassy slope, or trying
to start themselves on a slope that was not steep enough for coasting. A
grizzly pauses to play frequently. A mother and cubs often play together
in the water, with apparent enjoyment for all. Many a beaver pond is a
favorite swimming-hole for the cubs and a wading-place for the older
bears.

I watched an old grizzly romping in the mud of a shallow pond. After
rolling and wallowing about, until his fur coat was covered with mud
thick enough to form a plaster cast, he grew energetic. He ran for the
shore with all speed, as though hunters and dogs were upon him. Once out
of the mud, he turned and raced back through the pond, galloping all
the way across and sending the mud and water flying in exciting fashion.
After a momentary pause he again galloped through the mud and water to
the other side. The pond was half filled with sediment, and evidently
the mud was more than a foot deep.

One autumn while camping on the Continental Divide near the head of
Forest Cañon, I discovered that a grizzly will sometimes climb a slope
for the purpose of coasting. While I was watching a flock of bighorn
sheep, a grizzly came to the summit of a near-by mountain. I saw him as
he reached the top and supposed he was crossing to the other side. He
shuffled along apparently with definite plans in mind. But he was not
going over the top. He headed straight for an out-jutting ridge where
the wind-blown snow from the summit had formed a cornice at the top of
its steep snowy slope.

The grizzly hurled himself headlong upon the snow cornice with fore paws
outstretched. The cornice gave way beneath him. The snow slid and
snow-dust whirled about him. I had glimpses of him looking like a
fur-robed Eskimo falling down a snowy precipice in a blizzard. As the
snow-dust cleared, it revealed the grizzly seated in a moving mass of
snow, coasting swiftly down.

The snow went to pieces on a nearly hidden rock-point and spilled the
coaster. He rolled, then slid, first on his stomach head first, then on
his back feet first, but collected himself at the bottom. Rising and
bearing away from the deep snow, he climbed up again and appeared to
look with interest at the gully he had made in the slope as he coasted
and also at the scattered marks where he was spilled.

Just beneath the cornice he waded into the snow. He shook himself,
kicked the snow, went through swimming motions but still did not start
to slide. The slope was not steep enough. Wallowing down a short
distance, he rose, then rolled forward over and over--cartwheeled. After
three or four turns he began to slide. This stirred up so much snow-dust
that I could get only dim glimpses of him and could not tell whether he
was sliding head first or tail first. On the thin snow at the bottom the
dust-fog cleared, and the grizzly rolled over and over down the slope
like a log. Getting on his feet, he walked away and disappeared behind
the storm-battered trees at timber-line.

I took pains to track the bear. Down in the woods, more than three miles
from his coasting-place, he had made a meal the evening before off the
smelly old carcass of a deer. He spent the night by the bones. In the
morning he climbed to the top of a ridge that rose above the tree-tops.
His tracks showed that he had walked about here and stopped at three or
four places to look down on scenes below.

Then he had followed his tracks back close to where he had spent the
night. Here he had tramped about in the snow as though having nothing in
particular to do. But a coyote was trying to find something on the bones
and the bear may have been threatening him. He finally started off,
plainly with coasting in his mind, for without stopping he went directly
to the snow cornice. From tracks which I saw in this and other cañons I
realized that a grizzly sometimes goes out of his way in order to coast
down steep snowy places.

A grizzly that I was following one November morning was evidently well
fed, for he traveled slowly along with apparently nothing to do.
Descending the ridge on which he had been walking, he came upon the side
of a steep southern slope, across the ravine from where I had paused to
watch him. Occasionally a bush or weed sprang up as the warm sun
released it from its little burden of snow. If it was close to him, he
reached out one paw and stroked or boxed it daintily and playfully as a
kitten; or, if a few feet away, he stopped, turned his head to one side,
and looked at it with lazy, curious interest. He turned for a better
glimpse of a tall willow springing up as if inviting him to play and
appeared just ready to respond when he caught sight of his moving
dark-blue shadow against the white slope. Instantly, reaching out
lightly with one fore paw, he commenced to play with the shadow. As it
dodged, he tried to reach it with the other paw, then stopped to look at
it. He sat down and watched it intently, ready to strike it if it moved;
he pushed his nose closer to it. Keeping his eyes on the shadow, with a
sudden leap he threw both fore paws forward and brought them down where
the shadow had been before his move. For several seconds he leaped and
struck right and left in his vain efforts to catch it. Then, seated on
his haunches, he watched the shadow out of one eye. He turned his head,
possibly wondering what the shadow would do. He seemed surprised to
find that it was not behind him, and turned back quickly to see where it
was. Did the grizzly know what this shadow-thing was, and was all this
just jolly make-believe? In any case, he was playing and playing
merrily. When I first watched him he reminded me of a kitten, but the
longer he played the more his actions resembled those of a puppy and
finally those of dog.

As the grizzly backed slowly down the slope, he watched the shadow
following him, and made a feint as though about to grab it, but stopped.
Slowly he started after the shadow up the slope, then pursued it with a
rush. Then, backing away along the side of the slope, he watched the
shadow out of the corner of his eye. He suddenly stopped and stood as
though thinking; then wheeled, faced down the slope, and looked off into
the distance. After a second he slowly turned his head and looked over
first one shoulder, then the other, for the shadow. Finally, rising, he
looked between his legs.

Leisurely he lay down with head toward the sun and put fore paws over
his eyes as though starting a game of hide-and-seek and expected the
shadow to hide. But this may have been to shut the dazzling sun-glare
from his eyes, for presently he moved his head to one side to watch the
shadow.

Abruptly he ended, rose to his feet, and started off briskly in the
direction he was traveling in when the blue shadow upon the snow coaxed
him to stop and play.

Generally the grizzly plays alone. Most animals play with one or many
others of their species. Three or four times I have seen a lone grizzly
playing much after the manner of a dog--playing with himself as it were.
He ran round and round in a small circle, alternating this with leaping
into the air and dodging about, and rolling on his back with feet waving
in the air. He ended the play with a lively and enthusiastic chase of
his tail.

The two cubs that I raised were always eager for play. They played with
each other, they were ready at all times to play with me, and
occasionally one of them played with my dog Scotch. Grizzlies in
captivity will sometimes play with their keeper. Perhaps they would do
so more frequently if they liked the keeper. Sometimes pet bears will
play with strangers. They are ready to seize an opportunity for brief
play and in this, as with the man who was impersonating bears, they
often show a sense of humor; and they sometimes imitate or mock the
actions of some other animal.

An outing in northwestern Arizona gave me fresh glimpses into grizzly
life, although I had not expected to see grizzlies. I found them
apparently at home with heat and sand in the edge of a desert. Perhaps
these bears were only visitors. They were not dwarfed by the harsh
conditions but appeared similar to grizzlies of other localities.

I was sheltered to the leeward of a rock-outcrop waiting for a roaring
desert windstorm to subside. As I looked off into the dusty distance, a
brown, dust-covered grizzly came into view. He climbed up and sat down
upon a large sand-dune and looked around evidently glad that things were
clearing. He watched closely a dust spiral which came spinning across
the clear sky. As it passed close to him, a withered cactus-lobe dropped
from it upon the dune, turned over once or twice, and then rolled down
the slope. The grizzly took after it, striking out with right fore paw;
but, missing, was upon it with a plunge. Picking the cactus up
cautiously in his teeth, he held it for a second, then with a jerk of
his head tossed it into the air and pursued it. The sloping sand-dune
caved and slid beneath him. Forgetting the cactus, he leaped along the
crumbling sand and made a number of lunges, each followed by a dive and
an abrupt stop on the sand. He ran in a circle round the crest of the
dune several times, occasionally coming to a sudden stop. Then, sliding
down the dune, suddenly stopped his play.

He stood still at the foot of the dune for several seconds and looked
off into the distance. He was debating what he should do next. Off he
started slowly toward the horizon. Into the edge of the mysterious
landscape of a mirage he walked and vanished. I thought him lost and
rose to move on, when a purple shadowy landscape pushed up into the sky
and in this strange, dim scene a giant shadowy grizzly raced and played.

Play is a common habit of animals. Darwin, Wallace, and others have
emphasized its importance as a progressive evolutionary factor in the
survival of the fittest. Play is rest and relaxation; it gives power and
proficiency; it stimulates the brain to the highest pitch of keenness
and arouses all the faculties to be eager and at their best; it develops
the individual. Play not only is a profound advantage to the player,
but is necessary to the requirements of an efficient life.

All alert animals freshen themselves with play. The human race is
beginning to do intelligently what it once did instinctively; it is
relearning the lost art, the triumphant habit, of play.




Matching Wits with the Grizzly


In April, 1904, "Old Mose," an outlaw grizzly, was killed on Black
Mountain, Colorado. For thirty-five years he had kept up his
cattle-killing depredations. During this time he was often seen and
constantly hunted, and numerous attempts were made to trap him. His home
territory was about seventy-five miles in diameter and lay across the
Continental Divide. He regularly killed cattle, horses, sheep, and hogs
in this territory, and, so far as known, did not leave this region even
briefly. Two missing toes on his left hind foot were the means of
identifying his track.

Old Mose killed at least five men and eight hundred cattle, together
with dozens of colts and other live stock. His damage must have exceeded
thirty thousand dollars. Often he smashed the fences that were in his
way. He had a fiendish habit of slipping up on campers or prospectors,
then rushing into their camp with a roar, and he evidently enjoyed the
stampedes thus caused. On these occasions he made no attempt to attack.
Although he slaughtered stock to excess, he never went out and attacked
people. The five men whom he killed were men who had cornered him and
were attempting to kill him.

Rarely do grizzlies kill cattle or big game. Old Mose was an exception.
None of the other grizzlies in the surrounding mountains killed live
stock. During his last years Old Mose was followed at a distance by a
"cinnamon" bear of large size. This grizzly had nothing to do with the
killing, never associated with Old Mose, but simply fed on the abundance
which he left behind.

A heavy price on his head led the most skillful hunters and trappers to
try for Old Mose. Three of the best hunters were killed by him. All
trapping schemes failed; so, too, did attempts to poison. Finally he was
cornered by a pack of dogs, and the hunter ended his career with the
eighth shot.

Though Old Mose was forty or more years of age when killed, his teeth
were sound, his fur was in good condition, and he had every appearance
of being in excellent health. He was apparently good for several years
more of vigorous life.

Trapping the grizzly has become a non-essential occupation. It is a
waste of energy, because rarely successful. Now and then a bear is
trapped, but it is usually a young bear of but little experience, a
mother who is trying to protect her cubs, or a bear whose momentary
curiosity caused him to forget his customary caution.

Formerly it was not difficult to trap a grizzly. But he quickly learned
to avoid the menace of traps. The bear sees through all the camouflage
of the trapper. Deodorized and concealed traps, traps near the bait and
far from it, traps placed singly and in clusters--these, and even the
slender concealed string of a spring gun, he usually detects and avoids.

I spent a number of days with a trapper who felt certain that he would
secure the thousand-dollar reward for the capture of an outlaw
cattle-killing grizzly. Earlier than usual the cattlemen drove the
cattle from the summer range. The trapper took an old cow to a selected
spot near the end of a gulch, picketed her, and surrounded her with
spring guns and traps. The outer line of defense consisted of three
spring guns which guarded three avenues of approach to the cow. The
strings to these guns were of silk line stretched over bushes and tall
grass so as to be inconspicuous. As the bear would be likely to seize
the cow's head or neck, a trap was set between her head and a large
bowlder near by. There was a trap on each side of the cow and one behind
her.

The first night there was a light fall of snow, but no bear. But the
second night he came. Tracks showed that he scented or heard the cow
from afar--more than a mile away--and came straight for her. He stopped
within two feet of the silk line and walked cautiously round it until he
completed the circuit. But there was no opening. He then leaped the
line--something I had never before heard of a bear doing. He approached
the cow, then walked round her; he went close to the traps and detected
just where each one was concealed. Then, between the trap in front and
the one on the left, he seized and killed the cow. After feeding on her
he dragged the carcass across two traps and left it. Leaping the line
again, he went off down stream in the gulch.

The trapper reset the traps the following day and placed an additional
one just inside the line, at the point where the grizzly had leaped over
it. Then, some distance down stream, he strung a line across the gulch
and attached a spring gun to one end of the line.

The grizzly returned that night, coming down the gulch. After walking
the lines around the carcass, and apparently having detected the new
trap inside, he leaped the line at another point. He avoided the traps
and ate about half the remainder of the carcass. Then he piled a few
dead logs on what was left, leaped the line again, and went down the
gulch. He stopped within ten or twelve feet of the line here and
followed it along to where it connected with the rifle on the side of
the gulch. Walking round the rifle, he went back into the gulch and
followed his trail of the preceding night.

The trapper, amazed, vowed vengeance. He made haste and built a log pen
around the remains of the carcass. He then set two traps in the entrance
of the pen, one in front of the entrance and one inside the pen.

The second night following, the bear returned, leaped over the line, and
cautiously approached the pen. The bowlder formed part of the rear end
of this. Climbing on top of the bowlder, the bear tore off the upper
part of the pen, which rested on the bowlder, and then, from the
bowlder, without getting into the pen, reached down and dragged up the
carcass. In doing this one of the poles which had been torn out of place
and thrown to one side struck the top of a stump, turned over, and fell
across the line attached to a spring gun. This fired its waiting shot.
Then the grizzly did this astounding thing. He appears to have been on
top of the bowlder when the shot was fired, but he descended, made his
way to the smelly gun, and then examined it, the snow being tracked up
in front of it. Returning to the carcass, he dragged it off the bowlder
and ate the last mouthful. Leaving the bones where they lay, he walked
across the line where the pole rested on it and went off up the gulch.

A grizzly is wary for the preservation of his life. It is generally a
triumph of stalking to get within short range of him. His senses detect
danger afar. He will sometimes hear the stealthy approach of a hunter at
the distance of a quarter of a mile, and under favorable conditions he
will scent a man at a distance of a mile or more. Being ever on guard,
and generally in a place where he can scout with scent, sight, or
hearing, he usually manages to keep out of range or under cover. It is
not uncommon for two or three hunters in different parts of bear
territory, searching with field-glasses, watching from high places,
taking advantage of the wind, and moving silently, to spend a week
without even seeing a bear, although bears were about. Many times, even
when trailed with dogs, through his brains, his endurance, and his
ability to move rapidly over rough territory, the grizzly escapes being
cornered.

I have often been in bear territory for days without seeing one. Then
again I have seen two or more in a few hours. Frequently I have been
able to watch a grizzly at moderately short range for an hour or longer.
I was chiefly concerned to get near enough to study his actions, and not
to take a shot, as I trailed without a gun. But many a day I have failed
to see a grizzly, though I searched carefully in a territory which I
knew and where the habits of the individual bears were somewhat known to
me.

A grizzly territory is covered with a web of dim trails over which he
usually travels. If surprised, the grizzly turns and retreats over the
trail on which he was advancing. A bear's trail, close behind him, is a
dangerous place to be in if he does retreat. Many a hunter, a few feet
off the trail, has had the alarmed bear rush by without noticing him,
while others, who were directly on the trail, have been run over or
assailed by the bear.

When in a trap or cornered, a wounded grizzly sometimes feigns death.
Apparently, when he considers his situation desperate, he sees in this
method the possibility of throwing his assailant off his guard. A
trapper once invited me to go the rounds with him along his string of
traps. In one of these was a young grizzly. At short range the hunter
fired two shots and the bear fell in a heap.

We advanced within a few feet and saw that the bear was bleeding freely,
but halted "to be sure he was dead." "I make it a point," said the
hunter, "to wait until a bear dies before I start skinning him. Once I
made the mistake of putting down my rifle and starting to skin the bear
before he was dead."

We stepped forward, and the hunter prodded the bear with the end of the
rifle-barrel. Like a jumping-jack the bear sprang at the hunter, knocked
him over backwards, tore a hole through his clothing, and ripped a bad
wound in his skin on the thigh. Fortunately the chain and clog on the
trap held the bear from following up his assault.

On another occasion I was with a party of mounted hunters with dogs who
chased a grizzly out of his territory and cornered him in a deep box
cañon. He was at bay and the excited dogs were harrying him as we came
up. He stood in the end of the cañon, facing out, evidently watching for
an opportunity to escape. He discouraged all attacks by his swift and
cool-headed defense. If a bush stirred behind he made a feint to strike.
If a dog came close to his side he appeared to strike without looking.
He did not allow any rear movements or attacks to divert his attention
from the front, where the hunters stood at short range with rifles
ready. They waited for a chance to shoot without hitting a dog. Suddenly
the grizzly charged and all was confusion. With a stroke of fore paw he
broke the jaw of one horse, with another stroke he caved in three ribs
of another horse, he bit and broke a man's arm, disemboweled one dog and
wrecked another, and made his safe get-away. Not a shot had been fired.
There was no pursuit.

While with three hunters, I once came close upon a grizzly who was
digging for mice. The hunters opened fire. For seconds the cañon walls
crashed and echoed from the resounding rattling gunnery. Thirty or
forty shots were fired. The bear escaped. A hunter took up the trail and
the following day ran down the bear and killed him. He carried no wounds
except the one from the shot fired by this hunter. He weighed perhaps
five hundred pounds.

But the story of the shooting as told by one of the first three hunters
was something like this: "We came upon the largest grizzly that I had
ever seen. He must have weighed fifteen hundred pounds or more. He was
busy digging in an opening and didn't see us until we opened on him at
short range. As we had time, we aimed carefully, and each of us got in
several shots before he reached the woods. He ran with as much strength
as if nothing had happened; yet we simply filled him full of lead--made
a regular lead mine of him."

The grizzly is not an exceedingly difficult animal to kill if shot in a
vital spot--in the upper part of the heart, in the brain, or through the
centre of the shoulder into the spine. Hunters too often fire aimlessly,
or become so frightened that they do not even succeed in hitting the
bear, though firing shot after shot in his general direction.

William H. Wright once killed five bears with five shots in rapid
succession. I was with a hunter in a berry-patch when four grizzlies
fell with four lightning-like shots. George McClelland in Wyoming killed
nine bears inside of a minute. He probably fired sixteen shots. These
were grizzlies, two of which were cubs.

During the last few seconds of his life, after the grizzly receives a
fatal wound, he sometimes fights in an amazingly effective and deadly
manner. As an old bear-hunter once said, "the grizzly is likely to do a
lot of execution after he is nominally dead." Hundreds of hunters have
been wounded and scores of others killed by grizzlies which they were
trying to kill or capture. Hundreds of others have escaped death or
serious injury by extremely narrow margins.

A grizzly appears to have caused the death of the first white man to die
within the bounds of Colorado. This happened on the plains in the
eastern part of the State. Seeing the grizzly in the willows near camp,
the man went out to kill him. The wounded grizzly knocked him down and
mauled him so severely that he died.

In southern Colorado I saw a frightened hunter on horseback pursued by a
mother grizzly. He was chasing her cubs, when she suddenly charged him.
The horse wheeled and ran. Although the hunter urged the horse to its
utmost, the bear was almost upon them when his dogs rushed in and
distracted her.

Hunters claim that if a man feign death when knocked down by a grizzly
he is not likely to be injured. James Capen Adams appears to have saved
himself a number of times by this method. I have not had occasion to try
the experiment.

An old bear-hunter told me that he once saved himself from what seemed
to be certain death, in a most unusual manner. A grizzly knocked him
sprawling, then leaped upon him to chew him up. In falling, however, the
hunter had grabbed up a stone. With this he struck the bear a smashing
blow on the tip of his nose as the bear landed upon him. The bear backed
off with a roar of pain. This gave the hunter opportunity to seize his
rifle and fire a fatal shot.

Three or four men who have been severely bitten and shaken by grizzlies
have testified that they felt no pain at the time from these injuries. I
cannot account for this. Livingstone, the African explorer, also states
that he felt no pain when a lion was chewing him.

I once witnessed a grizzly-roping in Montana that had rare fighting and
adventure in it. Two cowboys pursued a grizzly nearly to camp, when
several others came riding out with whirling ropes seeking fun. They
roped the bear; but a horse was pulled off his feet and dragged, a
cowboy was ditched into a bunch of cactus, another cowboy lost his
saddle, the cinches giving way under the strain, and a horse struck in
the flank had to be shot. Meantime the bear got away and stampeded the
entire herd of cattle.

Bear stories have a fascination all their own. Here is one of five men
who were hunting in northwestern Montana, a section of high and rugged
mountain-peaks, snow-fields, and glaciers, well-nigh inaccessible, and
wholly uninhabited save by wild animals. Two of the men went off to a
distant glacier-basin for big game, separating and going on opposite
sides of a ridge. One of them after a steep climb came upon a grizzly
cub, so large as to appear full-grown except to the most careful
observer. He killed the bear with three cartridges from his Mauser
rifle, and then, leaning the rifle against a rock, stooped over to
examine his prize. Suddenly he heard a fearsome cry and a swift rush.
Turning, he saw the mother bear coming for him and not more than sixty
feet away.

Springing to his rifle, he put two steel-clad bullets into the grizzly,
emptying his gun. With remarkable coolness he slipped in another
cartridge and sent a third bullet into her. But Mauser bullets are small
and an enraged grizzly is a hard thing to stop. The three bullets did
not stop this mother bear, frantic at the sight of her dead cub. With
one stroke of her paw she knocked the hunter into a gulch, eight feet
below. Then she sprang down after him, caught him in her mouth, shook
him as a dog might shake a doll, and dropped him. She caught him up
again, his face between her tusks, shook him, and again dropped him. A
third time she snatched him up. But now the little Mauser bullets had
done their work, and she fell dead across the hunter's feet.

It was high time, for the man was in little better condition than the
bear. His scalp and cheek and throat were torn open, there were five
gaping wounds in his chest, his thigh bore an irregular tear two or
three inches wide from which the flesh hung in ragged strips, and his
left wrist was broken and the bones protruding through the twisted
flesh. His companion, alarmed by the six shots, hurried to the hunter.
He bound up his wounds, set him on a horse, guided him for two hours
across country without a trail, and got him to camp at nightfall. But to
save the man's life it was necessary to get him to the railroad in short
order. He was put on a horse with a man on each side to support him, and
for eleven hours the party climbed down the five miles through forest
and jungle, cutting their way as they went. At dark, completely
exhausted, they flagged a limited train. The hunter was hurried to a
hospital and operated upon and his life saved.

The man with a gun is a specialist. He is looking for a particular thing
in order to kill it. Generally the gun hampers full enjoyment of the
wilderness. The hunter misses most of the beauty and the glory of the
trail. If he stops to enjoy the pranks of other animals, or to notice
the color of cloud or flower, he will miss his opportunity to secure his
game. When at last he is within range of a bear, it may scent him and be
off at any minute, so he must shoot at once. He learns but little of the
character of the animal.

Trailing the grizzly without a gun is the very acme of hunting. The
gunless hunter comes up close, but he lingers to watch the bear and
perhaps her cubs. He sees them play. Often, too, he has the experience
of seeing wilderness etiquette when other bears or animals come into the
scene. The information that he gathers and his enjoyment excel those
obtained by the man with a gun.

Roosevelt has said and shown that the hunter whose chief interest is in
shooting has but little out of the hunt. Audubon did a little shooting
for specimens. Wright had as many thrills with the camera as with the
rifle. Adams was far happier and more useful with his live grizzlies
than he was killing other grizzlies. Emerson McMillin was satisfied to
hunt without either gun or camera. The words and sketches of Ernest
Thompson Seton have given us much of the artistic side of the
wilderness. Dr. Frank M. Chapman explored two continents for the facts
of bird-lore and in addition to his books prepared the magnificent
bird-groups in the American Museum of Natural History. Thoreau enjoyed
life in the wilderness without a gun. But John Muir was the supreme
wilderness hunter and wanderer. He never carried a gun. Usually he was
in the wilds alone. He spent years in a grizzly bear country. But the
wealth of nature-lore with which he enriched his books make him the
Shakespeare of nature.

The man without a gun can enjoy every scene of nature along his way. He
has time to turn aside for other animals, or to stop and watch any one
of the countless unexpected wild-life exhibitions that are ever
appearing. Then, too, he hears the many calls and sounds, the music of
the wilds. The wild places, especially in grizzly bear land, are crowded
with plants and with exhibitions of the manners and the customs of
animals, and are rich in real nature stories being lived with all their
charm and their dramatic changes.




Where Curiosity Wins


The grizzly bear has the most curiosity of any animal that I have
watched. As curiosity arises from the desire to know, it appears that
the superior mentality of the grizzly may be largely due to the
alertness which curiosity sustains.

Although the grizzly has learned the extreme danger of exposing himself
near man, yet, at times, all his vigilant senses are temporarily
hypnotized by curiosity. On rare occasions it betrays him into trouble,
or lands a cub in a trap. In old bears curiosity is accompanied with a
keenness of observation and a caution that enable him to satisfy his
desire for information without exposure to danger. Often it enables him
to anticipate a concealed danger--to penetrate the camouflage of
something dangerous. Curiosity prevents oncoming events from being
thrust on the curious. It is an effort to obtain advance information
instead of taking things as they come.

In 1826 Drummond, the botanist, collected plants in the Rocky Mountains.
In stopping to examine, to gather, and to press them he was doing the
unusual. He thus attracted the attention of numerous grizzlies, who even
came close to watch him. They showed no inclination to attack. Bears are
"chock-full of curiosity" and will sometimes forget to eat in trying to
understand at once the new or the unusual.

Lewis and Clark tell of a bear on a sand-bar who showed interest in
their boat as it passed. He raised himself on hind feet and looked after
them, and then plunged into the river and swam toward the boat. This
novel outfit should have attracted the attention of any living thing,
and a curious grizzly must have been almost overcome with wonder. Yet
the explorers erroneously assumed that this intense curiosity and
consequent attempt for closer inspection was evidence of ferocity.
During the first fifty years of the white man's contact with the
grizzly, the bear frequently came close to a man or a camp for a better
look; most frontiersmen thought this near approach was ferocity in the
bear. Often the bear was greeted with bullets, and in due time he
learned to satisfy his curiosity by stealth instead of by direct
approach. But inquisitive he still is.

  [Illustration: JOHNNY]

In crossing the mountains in northern New Mexico I was overtaken by a
Swede on his way to a lumber-camp. He carried a pack, and a part of it
was an accordion. We made camp that night near the head of a gulch.
Across from us a treeless mountain rose a thousand feet.

After supper the Swede played on his accordion and was soon lost in
music. Pausing in my note-making to enjoy his contented expression, I
saw an old grizzly watching us from across the mountain. Standing upon a
bowlder, he was looking over the tops of the spruce trees that thrust up
out of the gulch. Through my field-glasses he appeared even more lost in
wonder at the music than the enthusiastic, emotional player. When the
refrain died away, the grizzly climbed down off the bowlder, and then,
as another piece was begun, at once rose to remount, but instead stood
with fore paws against the bowlder, listening. By and by he started up
the mountain, pausing every few steps to turn and listen. He either
stood broadside, his head tilted sideways, or raised himself on tiptoe,
fascinated. A loud, lively, clashing close to one piece started him off
on a gallop, but as soon as the music stopped the bear paused. He
appeared puzzled and fidgeted about while the player sat silent,
listening to my description of the bear's movements. A soft and
melodious piece was next played. The bear, as the first strain sounded
on the evening air, seated himself on his haunches facing us, and thus
remained until the piece was finished. Then he climbed higher up the
mountain and, on reaching the sky-line, walked lingering along in the
last rays of the sun, looking down on us now and then as though wanting
more music.

For two or three hours I watched a number of water-ouzels in the St.
Vrain River. They often came within three or four feet of where I sat on
the bank with my back against a large bowlder. To avoid frightening
them, I sat motionless, not turning even my head for an hour or more at
a time. I was enjoying their actions, when suddenly I caught the
distinct odor of a bear. While still motionless and wondering further
about this new interest, I heard the faint crack of a stick behind me.
Turning my head at this sound, I saw a grizzly raised on hind legs with
fore paws resting on top of the bowlder against which I was leaning. He
looked at me with intense interest, all caution forgotten. His curiosity
absolutely dominated. But my slight movement had aroused him. In two
seconds from the time I turned he was crashing off through the thicket
and probably was condemning himself for being so curious.

One Sunday afternoon one of the men in a lumber-camp rigged up a canvas
hammock from the remnants of an old tent and suspended it between two
trees. A pet grizzly who belonged at the camp watched him with curious
interest while he worked. She observed him with still greater interest
as he stretched himself out in it and began reading. When the man
deserted the hammock, she walked up to it, struck it, pushed it back and
forth with fore paws, and then began rather awkwardly to climb into it.
She had almost succeeded, when her weight upon the edge caused it to tip
over and spill her on the ground. She leaped back surprised, then walked
round the hammock, eyeing it with great curiosity. But the second
attempt at climbing into the hammock was successful, and she made a most
comical and awkward sight stretched out in it flat upon her back.

I came upon a grizzly on the heights above the timber-line watching the
progress of a forest fire. Squatted on his haunches like a dog, he was
intently watching the fire-front below. A deep roar at one place, high
leaping flames at another, a vast smoke-cloud at another caused him to
turn toward each with rapt attention. He followed with eager eyes, also,
the swiftly advancing cloud-shadows as they mysteriously rushed forward
over ridge and valley. So intent was he that none of his keen senses
warned him of my presence, though I stood near for two or three minutes,
watching him. When I called he slowly turned his head. He stared at me
in a half-dazed manner, then angrily showed his teeth. After another
second he fled like a frightened rabbit.

The actions of a fisherman were being followed with the closest
attention by a grizzly when I came along the opposite side of a narrow
cañon. The bear stood still for some minutes, all his faculties
concentrated on the fisherman. Every cast of the fly was observed with
the greatest interest. A dangling trout caused him much excitement.
Possibly the wind, touched with man-scent, finally warned him of danger.
Anyway, he suddenly came to his senses, roused himself, and ran off.

On one of my camping-trips into the mountains I carried a long yellow
slicker. Wearing this one misty, half-snowy day, I was followed by a
grizzly. Twice he evidently came close to me; although I did not see
him, I scented him. When well upon a mountain during the afternoon, I
crossed an open place in the woods where a breeze broke up the
low-drifting clouds. For a moment I beheld a much interested grizzly
near by. He stood and stared at me with all caution forgotten in his
curiosity about the long yellow coat.

At dark I made camp at timber-line and forgot about the bear. The
slicker was hung over a pole against a cliff to drain and dry. I went to
sleep about eleven o'clock, after writing up my notes and watching my
camp-fire. During the night the grizzly came boldly into camp, reared
up, and slit the slicker. My shoes near by had not been noticed; the
bacon and raisins swinging from a limb had not interested his keen nose.
He was interested only in that slicker.

This was a case where the grizzly's curiosity might have got him into
trouble. So intent was he on seeing this one thing that for hours he had
forgotten food-hunting and followed me; and then in order to have a
closer examination of it he must have waited near my camp two or three
hours until I had lain down.

Another time, in the Yellowstone, while I was sleeping out, a big
grizzly who had followed me all day came to give me closer inspection. I
was awakened by his lightly clawing my bed. I opened my eyes and watched
him for some seconds and lay perfectly still while he sniffed me over.
After several seconds of this he appeared to have satisfied his
curiosity and walked quietly away beneath the stars.

As I was trying to flash information with a looking-glass from Mount
Lincoln to a prospector down in the valley one day, a grizzly became
attracted by the flashes and lay down to watch them circle and shimmer
here and there. In the San Juan Mountains a prospector once lost a wheel
from a rude cart which he was hauling up a steep, roadless slope. As the
detached wheel went bounding down and across the bottom of the gulch, a
grizzly hit an attitude of attention and watched it. He became excited
as it leaped and rushed up the opposite slope, and when it rolled over
he approached cautiously to see what manner of thing it might be. A
grizzly sat down on his haunches to watch the uncertain movements of an
umbrella which had taken advantage of a wind-storm to desert a
mountain-top artist. He observed the disheveled umbrella with the
greatest enjoyment as it danced across the moorland, and was
particularly interested when a whirl sent it high into the air.

Riding a lazy pony slowly, silently, along a trail in the San Juan
Mountains, I came close upon a grizzly and three cubs. They aroused the
deep emotional nature of my pony. He took on new and fiery life, and in
his eagerness to reach a high mountain across the cañon he forgot all
about the topography--the cañon that lay deep between. While he was
standing on one hind foot on the edge of the cañon I leaped from the
saddle. The old bear and cubs, forgetting all possible danger, while he
was thus performing stood up to watch the entire exhibition.

A grizzly keeps an eye on near-by animals, often without appearing to do
so. But if the animal is doing something new or unusual he gives it his
entire attention. Two bears, side by side, are interested in the same
thing; yet the individuality of each will show if you watch them a
minute. Of course, all bears are not equally curious about the same
thing, but seldom do I recall outwitting a bear even when appealing to
his curiosity, and never could I class him as stupid.

Grizzlies in regions just invaded by white men appear to have put in
much time trying to make out what these strange creatures were about.
What man is doing is ever of first importance to the long-lived grizzly.
His interest in his surroundings appears to be greater than that of the
average person. At any rate, the grizzly shows better knowledge of the
habits of human beings than people have of the habits of bears.

His is not the curiosity of the idle; the grizzly is not prying into the
affairs of others for mere pastime, but is concerned only so far as
these affairs may benefit or harm him. His is the intelligent curiosity
of a mind seeking facts. Most of the time he leads a solitary life; he
rarely exchanges ideas or information with other bears. Most animals
live in pairs or flocks and, each gathering information for all, they
divide sentinel duty; but single-handed the grizzly must get the news,
must scout for himself. He is ever on the watch, does nothing blindly,
and he simply must understand.

Any unusual occurrence arouses a grizzly's curiosity, and is to him "a
word to the wise." His success lies in constant alertness. He might well
be likened to a frontiersman; he has that painstaking vigilance, that
untiring energy, which seeks to discover whether this strange track,
sound, or displacement is the camouflage which conceals the enemy or if
it be a clue which will lead to something of advantage. He at once
endeavors to find out all that may be learned about it.

The grizzly bear may have inherited a love for exploration. His
ancestors were adventurers, coming to this continent from Asia. The
natural attraction which the new and unusual has for him may generally
be gratified in his curiosity about things at home. But we may readily
imagine that the grizzly must sometimes become restless when there is
nothing stirring near by, when he finds no excitement in his home
territory, and so wanders like an explorer to seek discoveries in
far-off scenes. He is innately an adventurer; he seeks adventure and
often finds it. His curiosity does not allow him to live in a rut--to
live contentedly with old conditions. He is always learning; he keeps
alive and growing.

The grizzly bear simply cannot be understood, nor half understood, if
his curiosity is not considered. Notice a grizzly bear pet, observe a
grizzly in a zoo, watch both the cubs and the old grizzlies in the
Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks. They walk about like superior
animals, which they are. Those in parks ever notice any sudden movement,
any new figure in the foreground, and detect any unusual noise that
comes from far away behind the woods. The grizzly bear and the scout are
masters of woodcraft through intensive observation. Behind the word
curiosity the grizzly bear has put a world of meaning.

The wild grizzly shows a deeper feeling for the scenes, the sounds, and
the movements around him than any other animal that I have watched.
Sometimes, while thus interested, he sits on haunches like a dog, again
he stands on all fours, at other times he stands on hind feet, tiptoe,
and, on rare occasions, he sits on his tail with fore paws against his
breast, perhaps leaning against something. Once in a while he gives full
attention while lying down.

When looking at scenery and sunsets, his appearance is one of enjoyment;
he appears to have feeling in the conscious presence of that which we
call beautiful or glorious. I have seen a grizzly looking at a
magnificent and many-colored sunset, completely absorbed. There was no
fear at a flash of lightning or the roar and echoing roll of thunder.
Once I saw a grizzly turn to stare at the course of a shooting star;
another gazed for seconds at a brilliant rainbow.

Generally the grizzly's attention to these demonstrations rose superior
to commonplace curiosity; he looked long, he listened closely, he was
absorbed, and he appeared to feel as he sat lost in wonder. Had he been
a child, with the power of speech, he certainly would have asked
questions. Often his expression, his attitude, indicated that he was
saying to himself: "What was that? What caused it? Where did that noise
come from? What are those strange shadows running from, and how can they
move without a sound?"




On the Defensive


In the grizzly bear we have the leading animal of North America, and one
who might well be put at the head of the wild life of the earth. He has
brain and brawn. He is self-contained and is prepared for anything. He
makes an impressive appearance. He looks capable. He has bulk, agility,
strength, endurance, repose, courage, enthusiasm, and curiosity. He is a
masterful fighter if forced to defend himself.

But, a century ago, fifty years ago, or to-day, one could ramble the
grizzly's territory in safety--unless attempting to kill a grizzly. The
grizzly objects to being killed. If he is surprised or crowded so that
he sees no escape, if the cubs are in danger or the mother thinks they
are, or if the bear is wounded, there will be a fight or a retreat; and
the grizzly will not be the one retreating. Almost every animal--wild or
domestic--will fight if cornered or if he thinks himself cornered.

Before the days of the repeating rifle the grizzly boldly wandered over
his domain as absolute master; there was nothing for him to fear; not
an aggressive foe existed. But, being ever curious, he hastened to
examine whatever interested him. The novel outfit of Lewis and Clark,
which appears to have attracted unusual attention even from frontier
people, must naturally have aroused the highest pitch of interest in the
numbers of bears congregated in places along the river. There were boats
of odd type,--some with sails,--strange cargoes, men in picturesque
accoutrements, and even a colored man. The frequent close approaches
which the bears made in trying to satisfy their curiosity caused Lewis
and Clark to think them ferocious.

But is the grizzly bear ferocious? All the firsthand evidence I can find
says he is not. Speaking from years of experience with him my answer is
emphatically, "No!" Nearly every one whom a grizzly has killed went out
with the special intention of killing a grizzly. The majority of people
who hold the opinion that he is not ferocious are those who have studied
him without attempting to kill him; while the majority who say that he
is ferocious are those who have killed or attempted to kill him.

During the greater part of my life I have lived in a grizzly bear
region. I have camped for months alone and without a gun in their
territory. I have seen them when alone and when with hunters, in
Colorado, Utah, Arizona, Mexico, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Washington,
British Columbia, and Alaska. I have spent weeks trailing and watching
grizzlies, and their tracks in the snow showed that they often trailed
me. They frequently came close, and there were times when they might
have attacked me with every advantage. But they did not do so. As they
never made any attack on me, nor on any one else that I know of who was
not bent on killing them, I can only conclude that they are not
ferocious.

Once I was running down a Wyoming mountainside, leaping fallen
fire-killed timber, when suddenly I surprised a grizzly by landing
within a few feet of him. He leaped up and struck at me with sufficient
force to have almost cut me in two had the blow landed. Then he
instantly fled. This, however, was not ferocity. Plainly he thought
himself attacked and struck in self-defense.

There are many naturalists and frontiersmen who affirm from first-hand
experience that the grizzly is not ferocious, and following are given a
number of quotations from a few of these men.

John Muir, who spent about forty years in the wilderness home of the
grizzly bear, from 1868 to 1912, usually camped alone and never carried
firearms. He has repeatedly called attention in his books to the
wilderness as a place of safety, and has mentioned that grizzly bears
are masters in attending to their own affairs; also that bears have
effectively suggested to wilderness visitors to do likewise. In "Our
National Parks" Muir says:--

    "In my first interview with a Sierra bear we were frightened and
    embarrassed, both of us, but the bear's behavior was better than
    mine.... After studying his appearance as he stood at rest, I rushed
    forward to frighten him, that I might study his gait in running.
    But, contrary to all I had heard about the shyness of bears, he did
    not run at all; and when I stopped short within a few steps of him,
    as he held his ground in a fighting attitude, my mistake was
    monstrously plain. I was put on my good behavior, and never
    afterwards forgot the right manners of the wilderness."

Muir also says, in "Steep Trails":--

    "There are bears in the woods, but not in such numbers nor of such
    unspeakable ferocity as town-dwellers imagine, nor do bears spend
    their lives in going about the country like the devil, seeking whom
    they may devour. Oregon bears, like most others, have no liking for
    man either as meat or as society; and while some may be curious at
    times to see what manner of creature he is, most of them have
    learned to shun people as deadly enemies."

Mr. William H. Wright spent most of his time from 1883 to 1908 as a
hunter of wild animals, and especially as a hunter of the grizzly. In
addition to being an observer of exceptional care while hunting and
trapping, he spent some years in photographing grizzlies. He first
studied them in order to hunt them successfully; then laid aside his
rifle and hunted them to study them. From full acquaintance with the
grizzly Mr. Wright declares that he is not ferocious. He offers the
following comment concerning his curiosity--a trait which early
explorers mistook for ferocity:--

    "We know now that the grizzly is chock-full of curiosity, and that
    one of his habits is to follow up any trail that puzzles or
    interests him, be it of man or beast. This trait has been noted and
    misconstrued by many.... So often have I seen this curiosity and
    proved it to be innocent that I have no fear whatever of these
    animals when indulging in this weakness of theirs. Time and again I
    have allowed one to approach within a few yards of me, and no calm
    observer who had watched a bear defying his own caution to satisfy
    his own inquisitiveness could mistake the nature of his approach."

Drummond, the botanist, had numerous experiences with grizzlies in the
Rocky Mountains in 1826. He was familiar with their curiosity. He says
that often they came close and stood up to look at him. But if he made a
noise with his specimen-box, or "even waved his hand," they ran away.

James Capen Adams hunted and trapped big game from 1849 to 1859 in
California and along the Pacific Coast. He captured numerous grizzlies,
both old and young, and literally domesticated them. He discusses their
characteristics at length. He knew them intimately, and in summing them
up after years of close association he says of the grizzly, "He did not
invite combat."

Kit Carson, another frontiersman of long experience with grizzlies, in
writing of them does not call them ferocious.

Dr. W. T. Hornaday knows the grizzly in the wilds and has long and
intimately known him in the zoo. In "The American Natural History" Dr.
Hornaday has the following:--

    "I have made many observations on the temper of the Grizzly Bear,
    and am convinced that naturally the disposition of this reputedly
    savage creature is rather peaceful and good-natured. At the same
    time, however, no animal is more prompt to resent an affront or
    injury, or punish an offender. The Grizzly temper is defensive, not
    aggressive; and unless the animal is cornered, or _thinks he is
    cornered_, he always flees from man."

The early explorers were warned by the Indians that the grizzly was "an
awful and ferocious animal." All the early writers had the preconceived
belief that the grizzly was ferocious. Many of these writers never saw a
grizzly, but wrote down as fact the erroneous conclusions of the
Indians. The few writers who did see a grizzly evidently judged him
largely from these preconceived ideas. Even Lewis and Clark describe a
number of the grizzly's actions and call him ferocious when the very
actions which they describe simply show him as being curious,
interested, or, at worst, excited at their strange appearance. They
misinterpreted what actually happened.

A few sentences from Audubon well illustrate the wrought-up frame of
mind of many hunters and authors when hunting or writing about the
grizzly. Audubon says:--

    "While in the neighborhood where the grizzly bear may possibly be
    hidden, the excited nerves will cause the heart's pulsations to
    quicken if but a startled ground squirrel run past, the sharp click
    of the lock is heard and the rifle hastily thrown to the shoulder
    before a second of time has assured the hunter of the trifling cause
    of his emotion." This suggests emotion but not accuracy.

    In summing up the animals of the North and West in 1790, Edward
    Umfreville wrote of the "red and the grizzle bear" that "their
    nature is savage and ferocious, their power dangerous, and their
    haunts to be guarded against."

In 1795 Sir Alexander MacKenzie recorded the following:--

    "The Indians entertain great apprehension of this kind of a bear,
    which is called the grisly bear, and they never venture to attack it
    except in a party of least three or four."

Henry M. Brackenridge, author of "Views of Louisiana," wrote the
following from hearsay:--

    "This animal is the monarch of the country which he inhabitates. The
    African lion or the Bengal tiger are not more terrible than he. He
    is the enemy of man and literally thirsts for human blood. So far
    from shunning, he seldom fails to attack and even to hunt him. The
    Indians make war upon these ferocious monsters with ceremonies as
    they do upon a tribe of their own species, and, in the recital of
    their victories, the death of one of them gives the warrior greater
    renown than the scalp of an enemy. He possesses an amazing strength,
    and attacks without hesitation and tears to pieces the largest
    buffalo."

The first paragraph which Lewis and Clark wrote concerning the grizzly,
April 29, 1805, says:

    "We proceeded early, with a moderate wind. Captain Lewis, who was on
    shore with one hunter, met about eight o'clock two white bears. Of
    the strength and ferocity of this animal the Indians had given us
    dreadful accounts; they never attack him but in parties of six or
    eight persons, and even then are often defeated with a loss of one
    or more of the party. Having no weapons but bows and arrows, and
    the bad guns which the traders supply them, they are obliged to
    approach very near the bear, and as no wound except through the head
    or heart is fatal they frequently fall a sacrifice if they miss
    their aim. He rather attacks than avoids man, and such is the terror
    which he has inspired that the Indians who go in quest of him paint
    themselves and perform all the superstitious rites customary when
    they make war on a neighboring nation. Hitherto those we had seen
    did not appear desirous of encountering us, but although to a
    skillful rifleman the danger is very much diminished, yet the white
    bear is still a terrible animal. On the approach of these two, both
    Captain Lewis and the hunter fired and each wounded a bear; one of
    them made his escape; the other turned upon Captain Lewis and
    pursued him seventy or eighty yards, but being badly wounded he
    could not run so fast as to prevent him reloading his piece, which
    he again aimed at him, and a third shot from the hunter brought him
    to the ground."

Below are two additional paragraphs from the Journal of Lewis and Clark.
These show that the grizzly was most wide-awake and curious, and also
that he was not accustomed to being afraid.

    "The bear which gave so much trouble on the head of the Missouri are
    equally fierce in this quarter. This morning one of them, which was
    on a sand-bar as the boat passed, raised himself on his hind feet
    and after looking at the party, plunged in and swam towards them. He
    was received with three balls in the body; he then turned around and
    made for the shore. Towards evening another entered the water to
    swim across. Captain Clark ordered the boat towards the shore, and
    just as the bear landed shot the animal in the head. It proved to be
    the largest female they had ever seen, and so old that its tusks
    were worn quite smooth."

    "Just as he arrived near Willow Run, he approached a thicket of
    brush in which was a white bear, which he did not discover till he
    was within ten feet of him; his horse started, and wheeling suddenly
    round, threw M'Neal almost immediately under the bear, who started
    up instantly, and finding the bear raising himself on his hind feet
    to attack him, struck him on the head with the butt end of his
    musket; the blow was so violent that it broke the breech of the
    musket and knocked the bear to the ground, and before he recovered,
    M'Neal, seeing a willow tree close by, sprang up, and there
    remained while the bear closely guarded the foot of the tree until
    late in the afternoon. He then went off, and M'Neal being released
    came down, and having found his horse, which had strayed off to the
    distance of two miles, returned to camp. These animals are, indeed,
    of a most extraordinary ferocity, and it is matter of wonder that in
    all our encounters we have had the good fortune to escape."

The grizzly was introduced to the world by Governor DeWitt Clinton of
New York, who appears to have taken his information from the Journal of
Lewis and Clark. In the course of an address before the Literary and
Philosophical Society of New York City in 1814, he completely
misinterpreted the real character of the grizzly and popularized a
number of errors that not only were believed then but have survived to
this day. The real grizzly is a distinguished character; but the grizzly
as commonly described by tongue and story--well, "there ain't no such
animal."

Governor Clinton in discussing the work in store for the coming
naturalists said, "There is the white, brown, or grizzly bear, the
ferocious tyrant of the American woods--it exists, the terror of the
savages, the tyrant of all other animals, devouring alike man and beast
and defying the attacks of a whole tribe of Indians." Few people realize
to what extent these inaccurate words have discouraged outdoor life and
how enormously they have contributed to the output of fictitious nature
writing.

The Indians had a profound respect for the fighting efficiency of the
grizzly. When one of them killed a grizzly he triumphantly wore the claw
as a medal for rare bravery. The grizzly has a head and a hide that the
Indian could rarely penetrate with either an arrow or a spear. We may
readily believe that the grizzly defied the attacks of "a whole tribe of
Indians," as Governor DeWitt Clinton said. He would defy a whole tribe
of Indians or a score of white men with similar weapons to-day. So, too,
would the elephant, the African lion, or the tiger.

With the rifles used at the time of Lewis and Clark it was necessary for
the hunter to approach close to the bear that the bullet might have
sufficient velocity to penetrate a vital spot. The rifles being only
single-shot, the hunter was exposed to the assault of the bear in case
his aim missed or the shot was ineffective. It is not surprising that
in most cases those attempting to kill the grizzly either were
overpowered by him or succeeded only through force of numbers and with
the loss of some of the assailants. But the ability of the grizzly to
withstand such attacks and to defend himself has been confused with
ferocity.

The grizzly is a fighting-machine of the first order and with the
weapons of two or three generations ago he often sold his life most
dearly. In a short time the grizzly had the reputation of being a
terrible fighter, and along with this he was given the reputation of
being ferocious--of being an awful hunter of man. For the grizzly to
repel effectually those who went out to attack him is a very different
thing from his going out to hunt and to attack people who were not
molesting him. This latter he has never done.

The words of Umfreville, MacKenzie, Brackenridge, Clinton, and Lewis and
Clark bring out strongly that the grizzly is a fighter, formidable,
perhaps unequaled. Their opinion on this point is supported by ample
first-hand testimony down through the years, from all over the grizzly
territory. But it has not been established that the grizzly is
ferocious, is seeking to kill. No, the grizzly does not look for a
fight; he is for peace at almost any price.

The grizzly fights in self-defense; men do the same. A man is not
criminal for fighting in self-defense; neither is a grizzly. For this
self-defense fighting the grizzly should not be put in the criminal
class. "The worm will turn," is an old saying. All animals fight in
self-defense, some more quickly than others. Few ever succeed against
man; the grizzly often does. Apparently the effective self-defense of
the grizzly is responsible for his criminal reputation.

It is common for those who believe that the grizzly is ferocious to
believe also that he eats human flesh. There is no known instance of his
having done so.

We are now hearing that the Alaska bears are especially ferocious. Yet,
in Alaska at the present time, and for many years in the past, the bear
trails are concealed as much as possible by being in the woods. This
would prevent the bear on the trail being readily seen by man. Along the
sea, where much bear food is cast ashore, the trails are not upon the
open beach but some distance away behind the trees. The bears depend on
scent to tell them if there is anything along the shore to eat. Both
their trails and their daily life in Alaska conclusively show that their
chief concern is to keep away from and out of sight of man.

The experience with bears in the Yellowstone Park demonstrates that the
grizzly is not ferocious. The Park had a numerous grizzly population
when it was made a wild-life reservation. The people who in increasing
numbers visited the Park carried no fire-arms and they were not molested
by the grizzlies. Yet grizzlies were all about. After some twenty years
of this friendly association of people and grizzlies, a number of
grizzlies, dyspeptic and demoralized from eating garbage, and annoyed by
the teasing of thoughtless people, became cross and lately even
dangerous. But these bears cannot be called ferocious. Eliminate the
garbage-piles and cease harassing the bears, and they will again be
friendly.

The grizzly bear has been a golden gift of the gods for the countless
writers of highly colored alleged natural history. There is a type, too,
of wild fiction-writers of the Captain Mayne Reid class whose thrilling
stories of the grizzly and other wilderness animals are purely
fictitious, and, though not even pretending to be fact, appear to have
been taken seriously by thousands. So prolific and continuous has been
the output of these writers that facts have been lost, and it is
practically impossible for the average individual to know the real
grizzly bear. This comes near to being the immortality of error. It is a
national misfortune that the overwhelming majority of people should be
imposed upon with erroneous natural history. The destiny of the human
race is intimately tied up with nature, and for any one to misunderstand
the simple facts which unite us with nature is to be out of harmony with
the whole scheme of things. An accurate knowledge of natural history has
an important place in guiding the judgments of our race.

Because of their intimate knowledge of the grizzly bear, James Capen
Adams, William H. Wright, and Philip Ashton Rollins admired this animal.
It would be a glorious thing if every one appreciated the real character
of the grizzly bear. A changed attitude toward him--the great animal of
the outdoors--might cause the wilderness to appeal to all as a friendly
wonderland.




Man's Loyal Companion

MISS GRIZZLY


Just as I reached the edge of the woods by a sawmill in the Medicine Bow
Mountains, a young grizzly rushed at me as though to "chew me up." She
frightened me for a second, but the next instant I realized that it was
only a bluff.

"You are not polite to strangers," I said to her.

She stood still for a minute, looked at me quietly, and then began
leaping and racing about me like an awkward puppy who has just made your
acquaintance and is eager for play.

"Miss Grizzly" had been captured when a small cub, about a year and a
half before, and raised by the foreman of the mill. The pet and favorite
of all the men in camp, she had the freedom of the place, played with
the visiting teamsters, and welcomed strangers. She was companionable
with every one, but was nobody's grizzly.

Early in her life at the mill she had learned to be afraid of the big
buzzing saw. One day as she stood several feet away, either listening
to the hum of the saw or watching the dust thrown from it, the saw
chanced to strike a knot. A piece of this flew and struck Miss Grizzly
solidly between the eyes, raising a lump. She was exceedingly wary of
the saw after that. Although she ranged around it, she never risked
going too close again. Often she leaped upon a log as it was starting on
the carrier for the saw, but she never failed to leap off before getting
as near the saw as she had been when struck by the flying chip.

A logger from several miles away who had come to remain at the mill for
some time brought with him his pet black bear. All the men were
assembled in the bunk-house to see the meeting of the two bears. Miss
Grizzly was in the room when the black bear came in. The instant the
black bear caught sight of Miss Grizzly he was "scared out of his wits."
He at once turned about and tried to run from the room. But haughty Miss
Grizzly acted indifferently. Although she was much smaller than the
black, there was no fear; she pretended that she had not seen him.
Ignoring him, she went out of the room by the rear door and began
playing with one of the dogs.

  [Illustration: A BLACK BEAR IN THE SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK]

Miss Grizzly was ever independent, resourceful, and capable. One day a
teamster handed her a bottle of catsup. Standing erect, she took it
deftly in her fore paws. She was greatly interested in it--probably in
the color. In turning it about she caught sight of a floating
air-bubble. Inverting the bottle from end to end, she tried to make this
out; she held it between her eyes and the light, she shook it back and
forth close to her ear. Then, going directly to a near-by log, she
brought the bottle down upon it and catsup splashed in all directions.
Her curiosity satisfied, she seemed to enjoy licking up the catsup.

The men never teased Miss Grizzly nor attempted to teach her any tricks.
Consequently her disposition was uniformly of the best. She enjoyed
cartwheeling and liked to have the men start her with a little push down
the slope near the mill. Curling her nose behind her toes, she rolled
over and over. Occasionally she climbed upon the flat-roofed lumber-shed
for the fun of rolling off. While she did much climbing over the logs
and lumber-piles and on the low roofs, she did not attempt to climb a
tree after the first few weeks she was at the mill.

She was never chained and she rambled about wherever she liked. She
spent most of her time at the sawmill or close to it. Occasionally she
followed one of the loggers off into the woods. Sometimes by the hour
she would lie near where he was working, interested in the flying chips.
Sometimes she would go off on a little hunting-excursion, tear an old
stump to pieces, or overturn rocks in search of ants and grubs. One day
a tree in falling sent a shower of limbs all about Miss Grizzly, one of
them apparently striking her. She was not injured, but, bawling like a
frightened baby, she turned and ran for camp, and never again did she go
to the woods with the logger.

Miss Grizzly was usually fed just outside the cook-house door. She
preferred to eat in seclusion. But when especially hungry she came
boldly into the dining-room while the men were eating. Walking round the
table, she accepted whatever was offered her--and every one offered her
something.

She was fond of the teamster who arrived twice a week with supplies and
usually followed him homeward, running along behind the wagon. Now and
then she preferred to ride close to him with her nose on his shoulder,
sitting on her haunches like a big dog. Usually she went only two or
three miles and then returned promptly home, but occasionally she
lingered. One day, during her third summer at the mill, she followed the
teamster as usual but did not return until in the night. After this she
made an occasional excursion into the woods alone, sometimes being gone
a day or two. One day, after an unusually long absence, she came back
accompanied by another young grizzly.

Tracks in the dust showed that the stranger had hesitated to approach
the mill. Within two or three hundred yards of it he had reared up,
alert, as though he had scented or heard something alarming. Here and
there in the road Miss Grizzly had evidently turned back to reassure
him. Both finally came within a short distance of the mill, when at the
appearance of one of the men the strange bear turned and fled.

The first winter Miss Grizzly did not offer to hibernate. She was fed
regularly, and the men never thought of encouraging her to den up. But
the second winter she slept three months. About the first of December
she dug a den back into the side of the big sawdust pile and crawled in.
Two or three times during the winter the men wakened her, and she came
to the mouth of the den and then returned to sleep. Once she came out
for a few hours, but, though tempted, refused to eat. Ordinarily Miss
Grizzly slept outside the sawmill, against one end of the building; but
sometimes she spent the night beneath the edge of the slab-pile.

The third autumn at the mill Miss Grizzly made numerous excursions into
the woods alone, and one day she went off on one from which she did not
return.


BEN FRANKLIN

James Capen Adams, known as "Grizzly Adams," the celebrated hunter and
trapper of wild American animals, was easily foremost for what he
accomplished in showing the real character of the grizzly bear. His
biography, "The Adventures of James Capen Adams," tells of his
intelligent, sympathetic, and successful methods in handling grizzly
bears, whether they were young or old. He made loyal companions of
grizzlies and trained them so that they served him capably in a number
of capacities. In the handling of these animals Adams studied their
character. He was uniformly sympathetic, kind, calm, and firm. He
endeavored to accomplish any desired end through gentleness and by
appeal to the animal's interest and loyalty. Force and torture, which so
often are the chief equipment of animal-trainers, had no place in his
methods.

The story of Ben Franklin and his bringing-up by Adams gives an
excellent view of a real grizzly and an excellent master. Adams took Ben
Franklin from a den when he was a tiny blind cub. At first he was fed on
a mixture of water, flour, and sugar, and then Adams persuaded a
greyhound which was nursing a puppy, Rambler, to suckle Ben. Ben, while
nursing, was made to wear buckskin mittens to prevent his scratching his
foster-mother. Ben and Rambler became lifelong companions, and when not
asleep spent most of their time playing and tussling with each other.

Sometimes, when traveling through the mountains with them when they were
still small, Adams would take them out of the wagon and allow them to
play together. They chased each other over the grass or had merry races
after rabbits, squirrels, or prairie-dogs. When older, they enjoyed
traveling all day together on foot. On a number of occasions it was
necessary for Ben to wear buckskin moccasins to protect his feet from
the sharp rocks and the desert sand, and once, after he was much larger,
his feet became so sore he was loaded into the wagon and hauled for a
day or two.

Ben quickly outstripped his foster-brother in size, but, although very
swift of foot, he was soon outrun by the greyhound. Several times Ben
and Rambler came upon the fleet-footed antelope, which Rambler closely
pursued for miles. Ben would usually race for half a mile or so, then,
being unable to keep up with Rambler, would sit down, look around for a
minute, and return to his master. For several years they followed Adams
in his long hunting-trips across the mountains.

Adams sometimes tempted Ben by placing within his reach scraps of dainty
food, but he was so well trained that he never touched any food until it
was given to him. Often, when hungry, Ben would sit on his haunches near
his master, occasionally looking up into his face and remonstrating if
he did not receive attention.

When Ben became larger, Adams trained him as a pack-animal, and Ben
carried the camp outfit and supplies on his back through the wilderness.
At other times he was used with Rambler in hunting, or when Adams was
attacking a grizzly. Ben was once severely injured in a fight with a
jaguar. He was not chained except when near a village, and then only for
the safety of the excited dogs.

On one of his hunting-expeditions in the mountains of Oregon, Adams had
what he considered one of the narrowest escapes of his life. He had with
him as usual Rambler and Ben Franklin. While passing through a thicket
Adams came unexpectedly upon a mother grizzly with cubs. The mother bear
at once knocked him down and began to chew him up. Ben Franklin had not
heretofore seen one of his kin.

"What will Ben do?" thought Adams, "help me or join his own kind and
also attack me?"

There was neither doubt nor hesitation in Ben's mind. Though young and
small, he went to the defense of his master against a grizzly five times
his own size. So vigorously did Ben throw himself upon the big grizzly
that she turned from Adams and vented her fury upon Ben. Though badly
wounded, Adams was able with this opportunity to reach for his rifle and
kill the grizzly.

Ben ran howling to camp. Adams, also frightfully injured, followed, and
found Ben lying under the wagon licking his bleeding sides. So grateful
was he to Ben for saving his life that he dressed the little bear's
wounds before giving attention to his own, and remained in camp several
days, giving Ben every possible attention and opportunity to recover. We
can understand his saying of Ben Franklin: "The most excellent of all
beasts, as faithful as it is possible for any animal to be; Ben
Franklin, the king of the forest, the flower of his race, my firmest
friend."

The following tribute to Ben Franklin appeared in the San Francisco
"Evening Bulletin" of January 19, 1858:--

    "DEATH OF A DISTINGUISHED NATIVE CALIFORNIAN

    "Ben Franklin, the grizzly bear, the favorite of the Museum man,
    Adams, the companion for the last three or four years of his various
    expeditions in the mountains and his sojourns in the cities and
    towns of California, departed from this mortal existence on Sunday
    evening, at 10 o'clock. The noble brute, which was captured at the
    head-waters of the Merced River in 1854, had been raised by his
    master from a cub, and during his life manifested the most
    indubitable indications of remarkable sagacity and affection. He was
    ever tame and gentle, and although possessed of the size and
    strength of a giant among brutes, was in disposition peaceful; rough
    it is true, in his playfulness, but always well disposed. He
    frequently carried his master's pack, provisions and weapons;
    frequently shared his blanket and fed from the same loaf.

    "One of his eyes was observed to be injured and several scars were
    to be seen about his head and neck; but they were honorable wounds
    and reflected as much credit upon poor Ben as the scars of a brave
    soldier. They were all received in the service of his human friend,
    protector and master. As might be supposed his loss has been
    severely felt by Adams."


MISS JIM AND MR. BESSIE

During many years in the West, Mr. Philip A. Rollins was an accurate and
sympathetic observer of the grizzly bear. He knew him in various
localities, and saw him under countless conditions. He hunted him with a
gun and then without a gun. He raised grizzlies, kindly and
intelligently. He is one of the highest authorities on the grizzly. He
kindly wrote for me the following from his personal experience:--

    "To one who knows and loves bears, Enos A. Mills, from one who
    loves them, Philip A. Rollins.

    "One summer day, now almost thirty years ago, a cowboy, hunting from
    our Wyoming ranch, killed a female grizzly bear. Her two attendant
    cubs were brought to the ranch by the cowboy, an operation which
    decreased the value of his clothing, and lessened the quantity of
    his skin. The names of Jim and Bessie, hastily bestowed as the
    party, in part hauling and swearing, and in part twisting and
    growling, made its arrival, were, for the sake of accuracy, later
    changed to Miss Jim and Mr. Bessie.

    "The youngsters were presently introduced to their sleeping quarters
    in the 'bear parlor,' an enclosure connecting with the main room of
    the ranch house by a doorway usually closed only with several
    curtains of heavy felt. Five black bears had their abode in the
    'bear parlor' when the little grizzlies registered their advent--a
    registration effected by clawing and biting everybody and everything
    within reach. After a few days marked by pandemonium and the
    enticements of very frequent meals, Miss Jim and Mr. Bessie were
    the dictators of all the black bears and the friends of all the men;
    of all the men, save one,--he could not refrain from teasing. Months
    passed; the little grizzlies increased in strength. The teasing
    continued. One day a visiting surgeon set three ribs and an arm.

    "Except for this research into human anatomy, nothing untoward
    happened until the end of four years. Meanwhile the two grizzlies
    had, at all times, come and gone at will into and out of the ranch
    house; had, whenever they desired, tidbits supplemental to their
    food; attended the ranch meals, perched in orderly fashion on a
    bench at the foot of the dining-table; and, after the first six
    months, made any excursion they wished, being absent from the ranch
    sometimes for several successive days, going thus either alone or as
    the companions of whatever man might have occasion to travel across
    country. These trips not infrequently made them adjuncts of a
    fishing-party, and on such occasions they were always content with
    their toll of the first four fish caught--two fish for each bear.

    "No attempt was ever made to exact from the bears the performance of
    tricks. They were treated from the outset in the same manner as one
    would treat a well-trained hunting hound, save that special care was
    taken that they should be fed before approaching either the men's
    dining-table in the ranch house or the lunching group of a
    fishing-party. On their bench at the foot of the dining-table, they
    never were indecorous, never snatched at any food, but would sit in
    dignified silence until called by name. Upon the sound of its name,
    the invited bear would lumber down to the floor, shuffle along to
    the chair of the inviter, and, having been given and somewhat gently
    received, the promised confection, would promptly return to its
    seat. It is true that the returning bear would not infrequently in
    passing, give playful, if vigorous, pokes into the bodies of its
    fellows, but none of the blows were aimed at or reached a human
    being.

    "The grizzlies were true companions, for they had all the
    affectionate faithfulness of the best of dogs, intelligence far
    beyond that of any horse, and endless sense of humor. As to
    intelligence, they repeatedly used their brains in a manner which
    perhaps is best exemplified by the following instance of another
    grizzly which I watched years ago: An animal which, discovering a
    half-filled food-can, and prevented by the semi-closed lid from
    touching the contents, takes a stone between its paws and smashes
    the lid, has claim to brains, even if that animal be only a bear.

    "I have said that nothing untoward happened during the four years.
    On second thought, an untoward event did occur. One November, a
    quantity of freshly preserved blueberries had been obtained from the
    East. These berries were transformed into twenty-four large
    deep-dish pies, one for each man on the ranch. On the date of the
    anticipated feast, an entertainment at a neighboring camp
    depopulated the house, but did not degrizzly its environs. In the
    early evening of that day, the house was approached by a file of
    men, pie-bent, expectant, joyous. Two house logs pulled from without
    doors, bear-tracks done upon the snow in vivid blue, forewarned that
    twenty-four pies had passed into history.

    "At the end of the four years, Miss Jim fell victim to poison,
    whether set for her or for wolves we never knew. Presently Mr.
    Bessie was once more teased, this time by a visiting ranchman. After
    the ranchman had been reassembled and revived, it was decided that
    the bear must be done for. He should not be killed. That smacked of
    murder. He should not be caged in a zoölogical garden. He had not
    sinned according to bear law. Accordingly it was agreed that he
    should be lost. He was led two hundred miles from the ranch and
    bidden to go his way. His return to the ranch preceded that of his
    keeper by eight hours. He was led to the mountains of Idaho, and the
    duration of his return journey not improbably is still the minimum
    record for that course. Finally two admirers conducted him to Oregon
    and there parted with him forever. The last view disclosed a
    cheerful expression as he contemplated two hams tied to a tree,
    partly for purposes of strategy and partly as a parting gift."

       *       *       *       *       *

A real acquaintance with the grizzly bear appears to fill every one with
admiration for him. Mr. William H. Wright, quoted elsewhere in this
book, understood the grizzly thoroughly. His comprehensive book, "The
Grizzly Bear," is dedicated with these words:--

  "WITH THE RESPECT, ADMIRATION AND AFFECTION
    OF THE AUTHOR,
  TO THE NOBLEST WILD ANIMAL OF NORTH AMERICA,
    THE GRIZZLY BEAR."




New Environments


A rock fell from a high cliff and struck upon solid granite near a
grizzly whom I was watching. There was a terrific crash and roar.
Unmindful of the flying fragments and pieces bounding near, the grizzly
reared up and pressed fore paws over his ears. Just as he was uncovering
them the echo came thundering and booming back from a cliff across the
lake. Again he hastily covered his ears with his paws to soften the
ear-bursting crash.

On another occasion a wounded bear took refuge in a small thicket where
the hunter was unable to get a shot at him. After failing to force the
bear into the open, the hunter gave a wild, ear-splitting yell. With a
growl of pain the bear at once chained furiously through the thicket
toward the hunter.

A grizzly has supersensitive ears, and loud, harsh sounds give his
nerves a harrowing shock. Through his higher development the grizzly
probably suffers more intensely and enjoys more fully than other
animals. The clashing city noises must be a never-ending irritation and
torture to a bear who has been sentenced to end his days in a riotous
environment. How he must yearn for the hush of the wilderness! And, as
his sense of smell is also amazingly developed, perhaps he longs for a
whiff of pine-spiced air and the wild, exquisite perfume of the violets.

Experience in many zoos has shown that subjecting caged grizzlies to
close contact with people is usually cruelty to animals. Often they
become cross, and a number of crowd-worried grizzlies have died
prematurely from resultant apoplexy. Modern zoo bear-pens are
constructed so that the bear is beyond the wiles of visitors--so that he
can have much privacy--one of the needs of any grizzly. Perhaps we too
often think of the bulky grizzly as being coarse and crude. But he is an
animal of the highest type, sensitive, independent, and retiring. The
normal bear is good-tempered and cheerful.

A grizzly placed in new environment in association with men will respond
happily only to considerate handling and proper feeding. Tell me what a
bear is fed and how, and I will tell you what the bear is--his
disposition and health. A grizzly should be fed by no one except his
keeper. If any one and every one feed a bear, he is likely to receive
food that he ought not to eat and to have it given in a manner annoying
to him. Feeding is the vital consideration for grizzly pets, for
grizzlies in zoos, and for grizzlies in National Parks.

When I arrived in Colorado, in 1884, grizzlies were still common
throughout the mountain areas of the State. They were numerous in a few
rugged sections where there were but few people and plenty of food. In
the Long's Peak region around my cabin, I early discovered the tracks of
five grizzlies. One or two missing toes or some other peculiarity
enabled me to determine the number. Two of these bears ranged near, and
I had frequent glimpses of them.

During the autumn of one year, 1893 as I remember, I crossed the
mountains between Trapper's Lake and Long's Peak. Snow covered most of
the ground. During the eight days which this trip occupied I must have
seen the tracks of between forty and forty-five grizzlies. I counted the
tracks of eleven in one half-day. But grizzlies decreased in numbers
rapidly. Numerous hunters came into the State annually. Stockmen and
settlers hunted grizzlies for fun and for their hides, and professional
hunters for revenue. Altogether, the grizzly had little chance for his
life, and only a few survived.

In the settlement of the West many of the grizzlies had to go. Men came
in with flocks of sheep and herds of cattle. The grizzlies' food was
taken or driven off. Rarely did a grizzly kill any of the invading
stock. Usually he worked harder for a living and took things
philosophically. Many grizzlies were killed and a few sought homes
elsewhere. But in the West there are still many wild regions, and in
these there is room for the grizzly.

There is a wonderful unwritten story of the making of an empire--the
Yellowstone--into a wildlife reservation. Big game had long been hunted
in this region. The grizzly bear, since his discovery, had been
relentlessly pursued; man with every conceivable contrivance was on his
trail day and night; there was no quarter and no hope for peace. But
suddenly firing ceased and pursuit stopped. This was epoch-marking.
"What can it mean?" the grizzlies must have instantly asked. They must
have asked it over and over again. But they quickly accepted it as a
fact and as an advantage, and came forth to associate peacefully with
man.

  [Illustration: A BLACK BEAR AND CUBS]

This has made a change worth while for man. Since shooting has stopped,
thousands have seen the grizzly and enjoyed him where only one saw him
before.

The grizzly is easily the most popular animal in the National Parks. He
really is the greatest animal on the continent. The grizzly walks: there
is a dignity, a lordliness of carriage, and an indifference to all the
world that impress themselves on the attention. Some one speaks quietly
to him: he halts, stands on hind legs, and shows a childlike eagerness
of interest in his expressive face. His attitude and responsiveness are
most companionable and never fail to awake the best in every one who
sees him in these moments.

Some one told me the following amusing incident concerning a grizzly. In
the southwest corner of Yellowstone Park a number of boys were bathing
in a stream, when a young grizzly came along and for a moment stood
watching their pranks. Then he slipped quietly behind some trees upon
the bank of the stream. When the boys approached this spot, with a wild
"Woof, woof," he leaped into the water among them. This caused great
excitement and merriment, plainly just what he desired. As he swam
hurriedly away, he looked back over his shoulder with satisfaction.

Another amusing incident also happened in the Yellowstone. As the stage
arrived at the Cañon Hotel, one of the passengers, who had been having
much to say concerning bears, put on his raincoat and got down on all
fours, proceeding to impersonate a bear. While this demonstration was on
a grizzly arrived. He made a rush at the man and chased him up a tree,
amid laughter and excitement. The bear made no attempt to harm any one
and plainly enjoyed this prank merely as a prank.

A grizzly mother in Yellowstone Park was catching trout for her cubs one
June day of 1891, when a friend and I came along. We went near to watch
them. Mother grizzly charged; we fled. After one leap she stood still
and appeared to be almost grinning at us. We went back, she charged, and
again we ran, although she stopped at the end of the first leap. But the
third time she leaped at us we stood our ground. She growled but came no
nearer. Although her threats did not appear to be in earnest, we did not
risk going closer; nor would I have risked standing even at that
distance if we had been outside of the Park boundary.

One day I saw a bear who appeared to be suffering from a headache. A
short time before he had eaten an enormous quantity of garbage. This may
have been his first dinner at a garbage-pile. Standing up, he felt of
his head with first one fore paw and then the other. Then, lying down,
he endeavored to hold his head in both fore paws. He had just thrust it
into a stream and was trying to rub it with his paw when I last saw him.
On another occasion I noticed a bear suffering from a toothache. He felt
of his tooth, clawed at it, and in a number of other ways showed his
annoyance.

In the Yellowstone the environment of grizzlies was radically changed
when it became a wild-life reservation. The numerous bear-population
quickly discovered that in the Park it would not be shot at. Grizzlies
at once wandered about near people with no attempt to conceal themselves
and with the best of manners; there was no annoying of people, no
crossness, no ferocity. This ideal association of people and grizzly
bears went on unmarred for years.

Numbers of bears from far outside Park boundaries came to spend two or
three months of each summer there, returning to home territory during
the autumn. Other grizzlies left their homes outside the Park and moved
in to stay. Whether the summer migrant bears or the recent residents
came to the Park because of the food, the safety, or both is difficult
to say. Unusual opportunities were furnished Park visitors to study and
observe the grizzly, with beneficial influence on themselves. But their
worrying of the bears in time proved harmful.

The bears were thoughtlessly betrayed. Increasing numbers of visitors
produced large garbage-piles. People came to the garbage-piles to watch
the bears feed and often teased them. The bears became cross. Sometimes
there were fights among the assembled bears over the smelly feasts. The
charity of the garbage-pile led them into bad habits, upset their
digestions, and ruined their dispositions. But their appetite for
garbage increased until they became food pensioners and garbage
drunkards. Like some humans they enjoy being pensioners and insist on
being supplied. If there wasn't enough garbage they raided camps and
hotels. If their raid was interrupted they resented it. In due time a
few of the most dyspeptic bears became bold and defiant raiders.

The Park is visited by thousands for whom the bears should be a source
of relaxation and furnish new interests and enjoyment. But the bears are
becoming unhealthy and are a menace to people. Now and then some
official tries to cure the bear trouble by having a number of bears
roped, tied, and whipped. Occasionally a bear is shot. There are those
who advocate that the guides and officials of the Park carry guns; and
still others are advocating the extermination of the grizzly. We need
the grizzly. Most cures proposed are worse than his trouble. But there
is a prevention in simply no garbage-piles.

In the Glacier National Park, which has been a wild-life reservation
only since 1910, the grizzlies have not yet become demoralized by
garbage. The grizzly bear situation in the Yellowstone is a serious and
even an alarming one, and what exists here is certain to develop in
other Parks. The demoralizing factors are likely to be expanded and not
diminished. Then, too, in the Yellowstone this continuous eating of
garbage may ere long bring on a pestilence among the grizzlies, or
possibly put a check on the number of cubs born. The whole situation
appears to be embraced in what I have previously said about what a
grizzly is fed and how.

The grizzly has not lost all his old instincts in the Park. Around the
garbage-piles he is a lazy, cross pensioner. But away from them, and
especially where he ranges outside of the Park, the same bear is as
alert and as energetic as ever in getting a living and watching out for
his safety. They are tame near garbage-piles but a short distance away
are wild. They are comparatively easy to trap near the garbage-piles,
where they will enter a trap-door; but the same bear outside the Park is
extremely wary and avoids going near a trap. Says William H. Wright, in
"The Grizzly Bear":--

    "Altogether I did not find the grizzlies of Yellowstone Park in any
    degree more tame or less cunning than they are to-day, for example,
    in the Selkirks. Many of them, it is true, come to the garbage-piles
    to feed, but these very bears, fifty yards back in the timber, are
    again as wild as any of them anywhere. At the cañon, the
    garbage-pile is in a hollow at the foot of rather a steep incline
    that leads up to the edge of the woods. Bear after bear, coming down
    the trails that converge toward this point, will stop as he reaches
    the brink of this declivity, glance downward, turn his head from
    side to side, and launch himself down hill, with the same air of
    committing himself to a foreign element that one sees in the upward
    glance and deep breath of a man launching himself from a diving
    board. On their return, they invariably halted for a few seconds at
    the top of the hill, looked around, occasionally shook themselves,
    and with their first step up the familiar trail, resumed every sign
    of their habitual caution and alertness. While on the garbage-pile
    itself, they appear to pay scant attention to the people gathered
    behind the fairly distant wire fence, but even there, an eye
    familiar with their actions would note the constant watch they kept
    on what was going on and the hurried way in which they fed; and,
    fifty feet from the edge of the surrounding timber, they would at
    the least scent or sound or sight, bolt as incontinently as in the
    farthest hills. Grizzlies are no more plentiful around the Park
    to-day than they were twenty-five years ago in the Bitter Roots, and
    a hundred yards from the garbage-pile they are no different."

Apparently young bears do not inherit fear of a trap, for they are
easily trapped. Young bears in captivity sometimes exhibit inherited
instincts; they may be pleasurably excited with the scent of food never
before seen; and they will sometimes dig down for a hidden root of a
kind that their parents ate but which they themselves had never seen. In
these cases of digging, they either dug at the right place from scent,
or from inherited memory of place. There was nothing on the surface to
indicate the presence of buried roots beneath.

The young of most animals, wild or tame, make interesting pets. But of
all the pets I have known, none equal grizzly cubs for energy,
alertness, and individuality. They take naturally to new, unnatural
environments. A grizzly cub learns speedily and from the first tries to
know everything around him. So all-knowing are his senses and his
instincts that the approach of anything new at once attracts him; he
stops play and with rare curiosity and concentration tries to understand
it. If he solve the mystery he promptly continues play at the point
where he left it.

"Baby Sylvester" is a celebrated bear story by Bret Harte that
characteristically and humorously describes a bear in new environments.
This little bear lost none of his native energy, alertness, and
versatility under changed and unexacting conditions. The way he handled
every situation was a constant surprise and delight.

Pet cubs, if gently treated, quickly accept and make the best of new
environment; they become intimate and loving, in fact most intensely so.
If handled kindly, the cub is willing to do everything reasonable,
everything he understands one wants done. But whip or scold him, and he
at once becomes stubborn and unwilling, reserved and cross. The grizzly
is an animal of high type and to have him develop his best he needs
fine, high consideration.

The grizzly's real character stands out when he is associated with man.
He is ever true to himself. A dog will lick the hand of a cruel master
or fawn on a most unworthy one. Not so the grizzly; he will not go down
in the dust. Only a uniformly just man can win his loyalty or retain his
friendship; he has individuality and self-respect and will not willingly
serve a tyrant or even bow to him. The wearing of a hat, the holding of
a pipe, the sitting up in a silly attitude, tricks which many dogs do to
please a master, the grizzly will do only under compulsion. The grizzly
is ever faithful and loyal to a worthy master; he will do unto you as
you do unto him. Elsewhere in this book I give a number of stories
which show the high character and the great possibilities of the grizzly
as a companion of man if handled intelligently.

In eastern Washington, "Grizzly" Adams captured a yearling grizzly which
he named Lady Washington. With her he used but little discipline, and he
at all times treated her with consideration and kindness. She was
constantly with him on long journeys across the mountains from State to
State, in camp and on hunts. Of her Adams says:--

    "She has always been with me; and often shared my dangers and
    privations, borne my burdens, and partaken of my meals. The reader
    may be surprised to hear of a grizzly companion and friend, but Lady
    Washington has been both to me. He may hardly credit the accounts of
    my nestling up between her and the fire to keep both sides warm
    under the frosty skies of the mountains, but all this is true."

The ability to comprehend a new situation or incident and readjust one's
self to it is the act of an open and a thinking mind. The food,
religion, politics, and personal habits of an individual are changed
slowly and with difficulty. Progress is constantly being held back by
old customs--the inability of the race to form new habits meeting new
conditions. Many species of extinct animals have perished because of
over-specialization. "Leave your prejudice at home" was the best advice
I received just prior to a trip to Europe. Prejudice and its allied
mental conditions are binding and delaying. The grizzly does not allow
old prejudice to prevent his exploring for new information, and he is
ever ready for something new in his environment.

In a generation or two the grizzly has become expert in eluding the
pursuer; he rivals the fox in concealing his trail, in confounding the
trailer and escaping with his life. That he has developed this trait
since coming in contact with the white man and the repeating rifle--out
of necessity--there can be no doubt. Formerly, the rightful monarch of
the wilds through superiority, he roamed freely about, indifferent as to
where he went or whether or not he was seen. He has been wise enough to
readjust himself to the evolutionary and revolutionary forces introduced
by man. The king of the wilderness has survived through retreat; he has
become the master of strategy. Instinct hardly accounts for this swift
evolution. The readjustment--avoiding man--does not indicate cowardice;
it indicates brains. In the warfare of existence, in changing, exacting
environments, the grizzly bear has risen triumphant.




Description, History, and Classification


Bears appear to be of Old World origin. Fossils tell of their existence
in Asia eons ago. The first bear emigrants perhaps landed in Alaska more
than a million years ago. They may have come over on one of the land
bridges which have at times connected Asia and America.

"In the Old World, bears were first distinguishable in the Upper
Miocene, and may there be traced back to forms which were unmistakably
derivatives of the early dogs," says Mr. William B. Scott in "A History
of Land Mammals in the Western Hemisphere."

It is interesting that bears, dogs, and seals descended from a common
ancestor. Seals have been called "sea bears." The bear lives for a long
period each year without either food or drink. During this period he
lies dormant. The seal has the habit of doing without food and drink and
also sleep for weeks while leading an active life. The bear and the dog
are alike in many ways. Both accept domestication readily and both
become loyal and intimate associates of man. Many of their ways in play
are alike, and each has the habit of sometimes becoming restless in his
home locality and traveling afar for adventure.

In North America bears have branched out into numerous species, and here
they have attained their greatest development. South America has,
perhaps, only one small species, and Africa only one. Europe and Asia
combined are accredited with having eight species.

The grizzly is distributed over the western half of North America, from
northern Alaska far down into Mexico. His home is more generally in the
mountains. He is also found in the barren lands of Canada, in the Bad
Lands of the Upper Missouri, and in the western margin of the Great
Plains. On a number of the wilderness islands of the Alaskan and
Northwest Coast, where he is of unusually large size, he forms a
numerous population.

The similarity of the mental processes and the customs of the various
species of Alaskan bears has been remarked upon by many people. Mr.
Charles Sheldon, the hunter-scientist, says:--

    "Nothing is more striking than the general similarity in nature,
    actions, appearance, and habits of both the brown bears of the humid
    coast region of Alaska and the grizzlies of the dry interior. The
    several species of both the coast and inland bears differ more or
    less widely in size, anatomy, color, and claws, but no one can
    observe them in their natural habitats without realizing that all
    have descended from a common ancestor."

The little that I have seen of the polar bear suggests to me that he may
be related to the grizzly. It is interesting that the coats of the polar
bear are uniformly white, while those of the grizzly are of assorted
colors.

The grizzly is scattered over a vast and varied range, feeds on a
variety of food, and is divided into numerous species and subspecies,
but he ever runs true to character, everywhere is one hundred per cent
grizzly. The chief points of dissimilarity in the different species are
the shape of the skull and the character of the teeth. Rarely is there
any difference apparent in the living animals; the classification is
determined chiefly from the teeth and the formation of the skull.

Color is no clue to the species. Color may vary as much in one species,
or even in one litter of cubs, as in different species widely separated
as to locality. Assemble a number of grizzlies representing each of the
many species and subspecies, and there will be a bewildering array of
fur coats, perhaps no two alike. However, as I have said, the grizzly's
characteristics are ever the same, no matter what the color of his coat
or where he lives. Wherever you see a grizzly,--on the glaciers of
Alaska, on the desert sands of Mexico, or fishing in the Columbia,--he
seems as much the same old acquaintance as the bluebird who comes each
spring.

The color of the species runs through many shades of brown: among them
are cream, tan, mouse-color, cinnamon, and golden yellow. Black or
almost white may be the fur of the grizzly, but shades of gray and brown
predominate. Infrequently a grizzly is seen with a coat of more than one
color. This variety of color causes confusion concerning species, but
within the bounds of the United States, outside of Alaska, there are
virtually only two kinds of bear, the black and the grizzly, though
these are divided by naturalists into many species and subspecies
according to the arrangement and forms of their teeth and the bones of
the head. Cinnamon and brown are common colors of both grizzlies and
black bears.

  [Illustration: GRIZZLY BEAR GROUP IN COLORADO MUSEUM OF NATURAL
    HISTORY, DENVER]

The fur of the grizzly, like any fur, is composed of a fine, thick
fleece lining and long, coarse hairs which project from it. The under
fur may be of any color, but the hairs that project through this are, I
believe, invariably dark with a silver tip. Commonly the fur is long and
shaggy on the grizzly's flanks and shoulders.

The grizzly is from six to seven feet long and in contour is pointed in
front, and heavy, though well-rounded, behind. His shoulders are high.
The body of the grizzly is longer, straighter along the back line, and
less humped on the haunches than the black bear's. The grizzly's head is
narrower, the jaws and nose longer and less blunt, than the black's.

The grizzly always appears larger than he really is. The average weight
is between three hundred and fifty and six hundred pounds; males weigh a
fourth more than females. Few grizzlies weigh more than seven hundred
pounds, though exceptional specimens are known to have weighed more than
one thousand. Adams gave the weight of "Samson," a California grizzly,
as fifteen hundred pounds, and a few Alaskan grizzlies, judging by
their skins, may have weighed more than "Samson." It may be that years
ago, when not so closely hunted, the grizzly lived longer and grew to a
larger size than he attains to-day.

The grizzly looks capable and substantial. His massive proportions
suggest strength rather than bulk. With back broad and well-rounded, and
feet pulled well together beneath him, he may at first appearance seem
top-heavy. But this impression is forgotten the instant his movements
display his ease of adjustment and nicety of balance. Without effort he
raises himself on hind legs to his full height gracefully and stands
with the repose of a statue.

Many of his movements appear awkward and clumsy. He is loose-jointed and
sometimes is rather lumbering; he often shuffles as though wearing a
large, loose wooden shoe on each foot. Commonly he travels along with a
gait neither walk nor trot. Yet the bear is exceedingly speedy and few
horses can overtake him. His endurance is astounding.

He has extraordinary strength. I have known him to drag the carcass of a
cow or a steer of twice his own weight. In several instances this was
dragged up the mountain-side over fallen logs, yet it was apparently
moved without extraordinary effort.

The grizzly is exceptionally expert and agile with his paws. With either
fore paw he can strike like a sledge-hammer or lift a heavy weight. He
boxes or strikes with lightning-like rapidity. Most grizzlies are
right-handed; that is, the right fore paw is most used. If a small
object is to be touched or moved, he will daintily use but one claw. The
black bear would use the entire paw.

The fore-foot prints made by the grizzly are much shorter than the
tracks made by his hind feet. His hind foot leaves a track similar to
the bare-footed track of a man, while the track of the fore foot has the
appearance of the grizzly's having walked upon the front of his
foot,--the ball and toes,--with the heel upraised. The fore claws are
from two to five inches long, the hind claws much shorter.

The fore ankles of the grizzly are smaller than the black bear's, the
hind feet relatively larger; the claws are much longer and less curved.
The grizzly's claws do not curve as sharply downward as a black's, but
the claw-points extend well beyond the ends of the toes. The black's
curved claws are much used in climbing; the grizzly's claws are used
mostly for digging.

The largest grizzly-track that I have measured was slightly more than
thirteen inches long, and seven and one half inches wide at the widest
point. These measurements did not include the claw-marks. In places
where this bear had slipped on snowy or muddy ground the track with
claw-marks was of most formidable appearance. Many of the big Alaskan
grizzlies have large feet, sometimes making a track eighteen inches in
length. However, in the Rocky Mountains I have seen a large track that
had been made by a comparatively small bear. More than once I have seen
bears weighing less than four hundred pounds whose feet were larger than
those of other bears who weighed upwards of six hundred pounds. A large
grizzly bear track does not necessarily indicate that it is the track of
a large bear.

There is marked difference in the ordinary ways of the black and the
grizzly. The grizzly is energetic, thorough, works hard, and takes life
rather seriously; while the black bear is lazy, careless, does no more
work each day than is necessary, and is more playful. The grizzly's
hibernating-den is usually a substantial, complete affair, while that of
the black bear is more or less of a makeshift. The black bear likes to
play with other bears, while the grizzly enjoys playing alone. The black
climbs a tree easily and often sleeps in a tree-top; the grizzly bear
rarely climbs after he passes cubhood.

Most of the time the grizzly is silent. When he does say anything it is
in a queer, but expressive, language. He utters a choppy champ of a
cough; he says "Woof," "Woof," with various accents; he growls
eloquently; he grunts and he sniffs. The youngsters say something like
"Eu-wow-wow," and when forlorn give an appealing cry I cannot translate
into words.

Little is known concerning the mating-habits of wild grizzly bears. The
majority of authorities maintain that mating takes place in June and
July, while a few believe that it occurs late in the autumn. The few
times that I have seen males and females together were in late June and
July.

Although known to the white race only a little more than a century, the
grizzly has been a part of the life and legends of the Indians for
countless generations. Often feared, frequently admired, his brain and
brawn are featured again and again; he is always the acknowledged chief
and master of the wilderness.

Many are the names that he carries: grizzly bear, silver-tip, white
bear, bald-face, cinnamon bear, roach-back, range bear, and others.

The first printed mention of the grizzly that I know of is one by Edward
Umfreville, who, in writing concerning Hudson's Bay in 1790, mentions
the "Grizzle Bear." In 1795 Sir Alexander MacKenzie writes of the
"Grisly Bear." But the grizzly was given a definite place in history
when Lewis and Clark mentioned him in their Journal, in April, 1805, as
the "white bear." Much that they wrote was made public, and the bear's
career started, by Governor DeWitt Clinton in an address before the
Literary and Philosophical Society of New York, May 4, 1814.

As is shown by Guthrie's Geography, George Ord, the naturalist,
described and first classified the grizzly as _Ursus horribilis_, in
1815. This was from information which Brackenridge had gathered, chiefly
from the Journal of Lewis and Clark, and was based on the "white bear"
of the type locality of the Missouri River a little above the mouth of
Poplar River, northeastern Montana.

Dr. C. Hart Merriam is the supreme authority concerning bears. Following
I give his classification of the grizzly and big brown bears, together
with quotations from his introduction to "North American Fauna, No. 41"
(1918):--

    "REVIEW OF THE GRIZZLY AND BIG BROWN BEARS OF NORTH AMERICA (_Genus
    Ursus_)

    "WITH DESCRIPTION OF A NEW GENUS VETULARCTOS

    "When Audubon and Bachman published their great work on the Mammals
    of North America (1846-1854), and in fact up to the year 1857, it
    was commonly believed by naturalists as well as by hunters and the
    public generally that there was only a single species of grizzly
    bear--the one described by Lewis and Clark in 1804-5, and named
    _Ursus horribilis_ by Ord in 1815. Baird, in 1857, described another
    species, from Coppermines, New Mexico, which he named _Ursus
    horriæus_.

    "Nearly forty years later, in my 'Preliminary Synopsis of the
    American Bears,' eight grizzlies and big brown bears were
    recognized, of which five were described as new. It was not then
    suspected that the number remaining to be discovered was anything
    like so great as has since proved to be the case. The steady influx
    of specimens resulting from the labors of the Biological Survey,
    supplemented by the personal efforts of a number of
    hunter-naturalists, brought to light many surprises, most of which
    have been published; and beginning in the spring of 1910, a fund
    placed at my disposal made it possible to offer hunters and trappers
    sufficient inducement to tempt them to exert themselves in securing
    needed specimens. As a result, the national collection of bears has
    steadily grown until, in number of species represented, in
    completeness of series, and in number of type specimens, it now far
    excels all other collections in the world together.

    "Nevertheless there are many gaps in the series. Knowledge of the
    big bears is by no means complete and many years must pass before
    the last word on the subject will be written. Many bears now roaming
    the wilds will have to be killed and their skulls and skins sent to
    museums before their characters and variations will be fully
    understood and before it will be possible to construct accurate
    maps of their ranges. Persons having the means and ambition to hunt
    big game may be assured that bears are still common in many parts of
    British Columbia, Yukon Territory, and Alaska, and that much
    additional material is absolutely required to settle questions still
    in doubt....

    "Some writers have advanced the view that the various species of
    bears freely interbreed. Let those so minded ask themselves the
    question, If promiscuous interbreeding were to take place, what
    would become of the species? From the nature of the case, the
    stability of species depends on the rarity of crossings with other
    species, for if interbreeding were to take place frequently the
    species so interbreeding would of course cease to exist, having
    merged into a common hybrid. Hybrids now and then occur,
    particularly in zoölogical gardens, but among wild animals in their
    native haunts they are exceedingly rare.

    "The number of species here given will appear to many as
    preposterous. To all such I extend a cordial invitation to visit the
    National Museum and see for themselves what the bear skulls show.
    Recognition of species is a matter of interpretation. If the
    material is adequate there can be little room for difference of
    opinion; if inadequate, many important points must remain in doubt.
    It is not the business of the naturalist either to create or to
    suppress species, but to endeavor to ascertain how many Nature has
    established, and having discovered this, to point out their
    characters and learn as much as possible about them.

    "One of the unlooked-for results of the critical study of the
    American bears is the discovery that the big bears, like mice and
    other small mammals, split up into a large number of forms whose
    ranges in some cases overlap so that three or more species may be
    found in the same region.

    "Another surprising result is the discovery that Admiralty Island in
    Southwestern Alaska appears to be inhabited by no less than five
    distinct species, each of which is obviously related to and
    representative of an adjacent mainland species....

    "SEXUAL DIFFERENCES

    "In most species of bears the males are much larger than the
    females. In some the disparity in size is very remarkable, as in
    _middendorffi_ of Kodiak Island and _magister_ of southern
    California. In a few cases the difference is slight, as in
    _kidderi_ of Alaska Peninsula.

    "AGE DIFFERENCES

    "Bear skulls undergo a series of changes from early life to old age,
    and in most species do not attain their mature form until seven or
    more years of age. In species having the frontal shield highly
    elevated, as in _middendorffi_, _kluane_, _stikeenensis_, and
    _mirabilis_, the frontals reach their maximum of arching or bulging
    in early adult life (about the sixth year), after which they
    gradually become flatter....

    "CLASSIFICATION OF GRIZZLY AND BIG BROWN BEARS

    "The differences formerly supposed to exist between the grizzlies
    and the big brown bears appear, in the light of the material now
    available, to distinguish certain groups of species from certain
    other groups, rather than the grizzlies collectively from the big
    brown bears collectively. In other words, the differences between
    the grizzlies on the one hand and the big brown bears on the other
    are neither so great nor so constant as at one time believed. And
    there are species which in the present state of knowledge cannot be
    positively referred to either group. In fact, it seems at least
    possible that certain species which appear to belong with the
    grizzlies are closely related to certain other species which clearly
    belong with the big brown bears. The typical brown bears differ from
    the typical grizzlies in peculiarities of color, claws, skull, and
    teeth. The color of the former is more uniform, with less of the
    surface grizzling due to admixture of pale-tipped hairs; the claws
    are shorter, more curved, darker, and scurfy instead of smooth; the
    skull is more massive; the fourth lower premolar is conical, lacking
    the sulcate heel of the true grizzlies. But these are average
    differences, not one of which holds true throughout the group. Most
    of the specimens in museums consist of skulls only, unaccompanied by
    skins or claws, leaving a doubt as to the external characters; and
    in old bears the important fourth lower premolar is likely to be so
    worn that its original form cannot be made out. And, worst of all,
    some of the grizzlies lack the distinctive type of premolar, leaving
    only the skull as a guide to their affinities. The present
    classification, therefore, must be regarded as tentative and subject
    to revision....

    "The present paper is merely a review of the existing state of
    knowledge of the grizzlies and big brown bears of America and does
    not include either the polar or the black bears. It is not intended
    as a monographic revision, but aims to supply a list of the species,
    together with descriptions and comparisons of adult skulls, chiefly
    males. Little is said of external characters, for the reason that
    little is known, only a few skins with claws being available for
    study.

    "LIST OF SPECIES AND SUBSPECIES OF GRIZZLY AND BIG BROWN BEARS, WITH
    TYPE LOCALITIES.[1]

    [Footnote 1: "Nearly 130 years ago Prof. Zauschner proposed the name
    _Ursus saribur_ for an animal 'from the region of Canada' (Bestimmung
    der Hundsart Krokute, und der Bärenart Saribur, p. 8, 1788), but the
    species appears to be impossible of identification."]

    (_Classification provisional._)


  _Horribilis_ group:
    _Ursus horribilis horribilis_ Ord    Missouri River, northeastern
                                           Montana.
      _horribilis bairdi_ Merriam        Blue River, Summit County,
                                           Colorado.
      _horribilis imperator_ Merriam     Yellowstone National Park,
                                           Wyoming.
      _chelidonias_ nobis                Jervis Inlet, British Columbia.
      _atnarko_ nobis                    Atnarko River, British Columbia.
      _kwakiutl_ Merriam                 Jervis Inlet, British Columbia.
      _nortoni_ Merriam                  Southeastern side Yakutat
                                           Bay, Alaska.
      _warburtoni_ Merriam               Atnarko River, British Columbia.
      _neglectus_ Merriam                Near Hawk Inlet, Admiralty
                                           Island, Southeastern Alaska.
      _californicus_ Merriam             Monterey, California.
      _tularensis_ Merriam               Fort Tejon, California.
      _colusus_ Merriam                  Sacramento Valley, California.
      _dusorgus_ nobis[2]                Jack Pine River, Alberta-British
                                           Columbia boundary.

  _Planiceps_ group:
    _Ursus nelsoni_ Merriam              Colonia Garcia, Chihuahua,
                                           Mexico.
      _texensis texensis_ Merriam        Davis Mountains, Texas.
      _texensis navaho_ Merriam          Navajo country near Fort
                                           Defiance, Arizona. (Probably
                                           Chuska Mts.)
      _planiceps_ nobis                  Colorado (exact locality
                                           uncertain).
      _macrodon_ nobis                   Twin Lakes, Colorado.
      _mirus_ nobis                      Yellowstone National Park,
                                           Wyoming.
      _eltonclarki_ Merriam              Near Freshwater Bay, Chichagof
                                           Island, Alaska.
      _tahltanicus_ Merriam              Klappan Creek ( = Third
                                           South Fork Stikine River),
                                           British Columbia.
      _insularis_ Merriam                Admiralty Island, Alaska.
      _orgilos_ Merriam                  Bartlett Bay, east side Glacier
                                           Bay, Southeastern Alaska.
      _orgiloides_ nobis                 Italio River, Alaska.
      _pallasi_ Merriam                  Donjek River, southwestern
                                           Yukon.
       _rungiusi rungiusi_ nobis         Rocky Mountains, headwaters
                                           Athabaska River, Alberta.
      _rungiusi sagittalis_ nobis        Champagne Landing, southwestern
                                           Yukon.
      _macfarlani nobis_                 Anderson River, 50 miles
                                           below Fort Anderson, Mackenzie.
      _canadensis_ Merriam[2]            Moose Pass, near Mount
                                           Robson, British Columbia.

  _Arizonæ_ group:
    _Ursus arizonæ_ Merriam              Escudilla Mts., Apache County,
                                           Arizona.
      _idahoensis_ nobis                 North Fork Teton River,
                                           eastern Idaho.
      _pulchellus pulchellus_ nobis      Ross River, Yukon.
      _pulchellus ereunetes_ nobis       Beaverfoot Range, Kootenay
                                           District, British Columbia.
      _oribasus_ nobis                   Upper Liard River, Yukon.
      _chelan_ Merriam                   East slope Cascade Mts.,
                                           Chelan County, Washington.
      _shoshone_ Merriam                 Estes Park, Colorado.
      _kennerlyi_ Merriam                Mountains of northeastern
                                           Sonora, near Los Nogales,
                                           Mexico.
      _utahensis_ Merriam                Salina Creek, near Mayfield,
                                           Utah.
      _perturbans_ nobis                 Mount Taylor, northern New
                                           Mexico.
      _rogersi rogersi_ nobis            Upper Greybull River, Absaroka
                                           Mountains, Wyoming.
      _rogersi bisonophagus_ nobis       Black Hills (Bear Lodge),
                                           northeastern Wyoming.
      _pervagor_ Merriam                 Pemberton Lake (now Lillooet
                                           Lake), British Columbia.
      _caurinus_ Merriam                 Berners Bay, east side
                                           Lynn Canal, Southeastern
                                           Alaska.
      _eulophus_ Merriam                 Admiralty Island, Southeastern
                                           Alaska.
      _klamathensis_ Merriam[2]          Beswick, near mouth Shovel
                                           Creek, Klamath River,
                                           northern California.
      _mendocinensis_ Merriam[2]         Long Valley, Mendocino
                                           County, California.
      _magister_ Merriam[2]              Los Biacitos, Santa Ana
                                           Mountains, Southern California.

  _Hylodromus_ group:
    _Ursus hylodromus_ Elliot            Rocky Mountains, western
                                           Alberta.
      _kluane kluane_ Merriam            McConnell River, Yukon.
      _kluane impiger_ nobis             Columbia Valley, British Columbia.
      _pellyensis_ nobis                 Ketza Divide, Pelly Mountains,
                                           Yukon.
      _andersoni_ nobis[2]               Dease River, near Great
                                           Bear Lake, Mackenzie.

  _Horriæus_ group:
    _Ursus apache_ Merriam               Whorton Creek, south slope
                                           White Mts., eastern Arizona
                                           (a few miles west of Blue).
      _horriæus_ Baird                   Coppermines, southwestern
                                           New Mexico.
      _henshawi_ Merriam                 Southern Sierra Nevada,
                                           near Havilah, Kern County,
                                           California.

  _Stikeenensis_ group:
    _Ursus stikeenensis_ Merriam         Tatletuey Lake, tributary to
                                           Finlay River, near head
                                           Skeena River, British Columbia.
      _crassodon_ nobis                  Klappan Creek (= Third
                                           South Fork Stikine River),
                                           British Columbia.
      _crassus_ nobis[2]                 Upper Macmillan River, Yukon.
      _mirabilis_ Merriam[2]             Admiralty Island, Alaska.
      _absarokus_ Merriam[2]             Little Bighorn River, northern
                                           Bighorn Mountains,
                                           Montana.

  _Alascensis_ group:
    _Ursus alascensis_ Merriam           Unalaklik River, Alaska.
      _toklat_ Merriam                   Head of Toklat River, north
                                           base Alaska Range, near
                                           Mount McKinley, Alaska.
      _latifrons_ Merriam                Jasper House, Alberta.

  _Richardsoni_ group:
    _Ursus richardsoni_ Swainson         Shore of Arctic Ocean, west
                                           side Bathurst Inlet, near
                                           mouth of Hood River.
      _russelli_ Merriam[2]              West side Mackenzie River
                                           delta, Canada.
      _phæonyx_ Merriam[2]               Glacier Mountain, Tanana
                                           Mts., Alaska (about 2
                                           miles below source of Comet
                                           Creek, near Forty-mile
                                           Creek, between Yukon and
                                           Tanana Rivers).
      _internationalis_ Merriam          Alaska-Yukon boundary,
                                           about 50 miles south of
                                           Arctic coast.
      _ophrus_ Merriam                   Eastern British Columbia
                                           (exact locality unknown).
      _washake_ Merriam                  North Fork Shoshone River,
                                           Absaroka Mts., western
                                           Wyoming.

  _Kidderi_ group:
    _Ursus kidderi kidderi_ Merriam      Chinitna Bay, Cook Inlet,
                                           Alaska.
      _kidderi tundrensis_ Merriam       Shaktolik River, Norton
                                           Sound, Alaska.
      _eximius_ Merriam                  Head of Knik Arm, Cook
                                           Inlet, Alaska.

  _Innuitus_ group:
    _Ursus innuitus_ Merriam             Golofnin Bay, south side
                                           Seward Peninsula, northwestern
                                           Alaska.
      _cressonus_ Merriam                Lakina River, south slope
                                           Wrangell Range, Alaska.
      _alexandræ_ Merriam[2]             Kusilof Lake, Kenai Peninsula,
                                           Alaska.

  _Townsendi_ group:
    _Ursus townsendi_ Merriam            Mainland of Southeastern
                                           Alaska (exact locality
                                           uncertain).

  _Dalli_ group:
    _Ursus dalli_ Merriam                Yakutat Bay (northwest
                                           side), Alaska.
      _hoots_ Merriam                    Clearwater Creek, a north
                                           branch of Stikine River,
                                           British Columbia.
      _sitkensis_ Merriam                Sitka Islands, Alaska.
      _shirasi_ Merriam                  Pybus Bay, Admiralty Island,
                                           Alaska.
      _nuchek_ Merriam[2]                Head of Nuchek Bay, Hinchinbrook
                                           Island, Prince
                                           William Sound, Alaska.
  _Gyas_ group:
    _Ursus gyas_ Merriam                 Pavlof Bay, Alaska Peninsula.
      _middendorffi_ Merriam             Kodiak Island, Alaska.


  _Kenaiensis_ group:
    _Ursus kenaiensis_ Merriam           Cape Elizabeth, extreme
                                           west end Kenai Peninsula,
                                           Alaska.
      _sheldoni_ Merriam                 Montague Island, Prince
                                           William Sound, Alaska.

  _Vetularctos_ genus nobis (pp. 131-133, 'North American Fauna, No. 41'):
    _Vetularctos inopinatus_ nobis       Rendezvous Lake, northeast
                                           of Fort Anderson, Mackenzie.

  [Footnote 2: "Reference to group provisional."]




Will the Grizzly be Exterminated?


The grizzly bear is vanishing so rapidly that without protection he is
likely to become extinct. If there is good reason--and there is--for the
protection of deer, elk, and the bighorn, there is every good reason why
we should protect the grizzly. He is a destroyer of pests, he helps
sustain a hunting-industry, he encourages many individuals to take
mental relaxation and healthful exercise in the outdoors, he carries
more popular and sustained interest than any other animal, and, in most
respects, he is the greatest wild animal in the world. It will benefit
the human race to perpetuate the grizzly, and to do this will require a
few years of legal protection.

A close season for a period of years is needed. If there is an open
season this should be restricted to two or three States, and it should
be short. The number taken should be limited to one per person, unless a
mother grizzly with cubs be killed, in which case the cubs also may be
captured. The use of steel trap, deadfall, poison, spring gun, and dogs
should be prohibited and the sale of hides forbidden.

Most big game has had some protection for years; the grizzly has had
none. He is not a bad fellow, there is no just claim against him, but he
has paid the penalty of being misunderstood. He has been classed as a
menace and relentlessly pursued as though a dangerous criminal. Men
follow him the year round, with guns, dogs, horses, traps, and poison.
He is even trailed to the hibernating-den and slaughtered without any
chance for his life.

Fear of bears and prejudice against them is all too often taught and
developed in childhood. Mothers and nurses hush children by telling
them, "Bears will get you if you're not good." People, however, are now
learning that bears are not ferocious, that they do not eat human flesh,
and that in the wilds the grizzly flees from man as though from a
pestilence.

Mr. Pocock, in "A Man in the Open," with quaint, satirical philosophy
goes to the bottom of the grizzly question. He says:--

    "The coarse treatment grizzlies gets from hunters makes them sort of
    bashful with any stranger. Ye see, b'ars yearns to man, same as the
    heathen does to their fool gods, whereas bullets, pizen, and
    deadfalls is sort of discouraging. Their sentiments gets mixed, they
    acts confused and naturally if they're shot at they'll get hostile,
    same as you and me. They is misunderstood and that's how nobody has
    a kind word for grizzlies."

Grizzlies are walking mouse-traps. They are, like birds, destroyers of
pests, and give us services of economic value. They are useful for what
they eat; their food is made up in part of mice, rats, rabbits, ants,
grasshoppers, and stray carcasses, and the remainder may be considered
of little or no value to man.

A grizzly came down into a rancher's meadow in southern Colorado and
"rooted it up like a hog." The owner was up in arms and one morning
killed the invader. Curious as to what the grizzly could have been
eating, he sent for a local butcher. His "insides" showed, among other
things, the remains of thirty-four mice, one rat, and one rabbit.

Rarely does a grizzly kill cattle. This killing, when done, is by one
grizzly. Perhaps ninety-nine out of every hundred grizzlies never kill
any stock or big game. Then, too, when a grizzly kills cattle he
usually makes a business of it, and if one should get the habit he could
be specially disposed of. Protection to the grizzly would not be at the
expense of live stock or big game.

During rambles in the mountains through the years I have investigated
more than fourteen cases in which the grizzly was charged with killing
cattle. In a number of instances there was not a trace of a grizzly near
the carcass. There were traces of other animals, but the guilty one
could not be determined. There were eleven carcasses that had been
visited by grizzlies; six of these animals had been killed by lions, one
by poisonous plants, one by wolves, two by stones that rolled from a
land-slip. In the eleventh case neither the carcass nor its surroundings
gave any conclusive evidence for determining the cause of the cow's
death. The carcass had been fed upon by coyotes, wolves, lions, and both
black and grizzly bears. But what killed the cow? It might have been
lightning or disease, a wolf or a lion, or possibly a hunter. Many
hunters are not up on natural history and shoot at the first object that
moves. The only evidence against the grizzly was entirely
circumstantial; he had eaten a part of the carcass.

The killing of wild life is not in my line. I am not a hunter. But in
the hunting-industry the grizzly heads the list. The hunter will pay
more for a shot at a grizzly than for a shot at any other, and often all
other, big game. Hunters frequently spend from one thousand to many
thousands of dollars in going after the grizzly. They will work harder
and longer for a grizzly than for any other animal.

But the grizzly-hunting industry is coming to an end through decreasing
numbers of grizzlies. A short time ago the "Saturday Evening Post" said:
"The betting is a thousand to one that you will never kill a grizzly
inside the United States. There are a few left but not many; and all are
highly trained in suspiciousness and resourcefulness."

If the hunting of grizzlies is to continue, the grizzly must promptly
have some protection. Mr. J. A. McGuire, editor of "Outdoor Life," has
been working for years to bring about legal protection and intelligent
understanding of bears. At last it looks as though he would succeed. But
much work is yet to be done before all States give bears proper
protection, before bear natural histories are rewritten and bears are
appreciated at their real, their high, worth. Writing as a
hunter-naturalist, Mr. McGuire says:--

    "When the grizzly bear shall have passed--and he is found in such
    lamentably small numbers now that his exit from our midst is but a
    question of years--there shall have disappeared from our mountains
    one of the sublimest specimens of animal life that exalts the
    western wilderness. As a sporting trophy, his hide stands at the top
    of the list of American wild animals--one which sportsmen from all
    over the world have come here to secure. Nowhere else in the world
    can the grizzly bear be found except in western North America, and
    we as sportsmen naturalists should see to it that his demise is not
    hastened and that his life shall be preserved to posterity."

Shooting is not all there is to hunting. Hunters while hunting often
take on a new lease of efficiency, even though they do not get the
grizzly. Often, too, they make the intimate acquaintance of another
hunter, or of a guide, and return with enlarged views into human nature;
or they develop a new and worth-while outdoor interest. So that,
considered solely for hunting purposes, the grizzly has both a
commercial and a higher value.

Any one who sees a grizzly bear in his rugged mountain home or even in a
National Park, which is a wilderness-land, will receive a lasting
impression. It is the character of this animal that stands out. He is of
heroic size and powerfully built, but he is at all times so dignified,
and so wide-awake, that his individuality never fails to impress you.
The splendid animal and the scene wherein he stood will often be
recalled. Again and again you will wonder concerning him and his life,
his neighbors, and his territory. The interest which you have received
may lead you to revisit the wild, revivifying mountain-land in which he
lives.

When the hunter ceased firing in the Yellowstone National Park, the
grizzly bear was the first of the big wild animals to discover that it
was safe to show himself. The wildest animal, extremely shy of being
seen even at long range, he showed his superior intelligence, his strong
character, in being the first to realize that times had changed and that
man had ceased trying to kill the wild folks on sight. It took the other
big animals a long time to learn that they were protected. Many of them
relied on old experiences, and for years, on the approach of man, they
ran for their lives.

National Parks are developing a friendly interest in grizzlies, and
there is a growing appreciation of the grizzly's true worth. But just at
present this appreciation and this sentiment are not strong enough to
protect the grizzly without the formal assistance of a
grizzly-protection law.

During the past twenty-five years the grizzly population has enormously
decreased. The grizzly is in danger of extermination. In California,
where he was once numerous, he is now extinct. He has also gone from
extensive areas in all the other Western States. In the areas where he
still exists the population is in most places sparse.

It is doubtful if he is holding his own anywhere within the bounds of
the United States, unless it be in Glacier National Park. The grizzly
population of the Yellowstone National Park is variously estimated from
fifty to one hundred. But each year numbers of cubs born inside the Park
are trapped just outside of it, and old bears whose home is inside the
Park are occasionally shot outside the boundary-line. It may be that the
bears coming in from outside, a few of whom each year appear to move
into the Park to live, may maintain the normal or possibly slightly
increase the population; but this is doubtful. There are a few
grizzlies in the Rocky Mountain National Park, perhaps a few in the
Mount Rainier Park, and a number in four or five of the Canadian
National Parks. Alaska is the grizzly country at present; but dozens of
hunters are each year putting a check on its increase in grizzly
population, except in the Mount McKinley National Park.

The grizzly needs protection at once, needs your active interest now. He
is making his last stand and is surrounded by relentless foes.
Protection only will save him and enable him to perpetuate himself.
Without the grizzly the wilds would be dull, the cañon and the crag
would lose their eloquent appeal. This wild uncrowned king has won his
place in nature which no other animal can fill. We need the grizzly
bear--the King of the Wilderness World.

With a closed season everywhere in the United States for a few years,
the bears would increase in numbers and in due time areas now
depopulated would be again peopled by them. Among the grizzlies there
are always adventurers who wander far away looking for new scenes. These
exploring grizzlies, as numbers increased, might redistribute
themselves. Grizzlies in western Oregon might wander southward and even
restock the four National Parks of California, where there is now not a
grizzly. But this would require a cessation of the shooting of grizzlies
for a number of years.

The population might be more quickly affected by restocking. A few
grizzlies could be trapped in Yellowstone and set free in these other
National Parks. The problem of restocking unoccupied areas would not be
difficult if there could be for a few years a general closed season. In
restocking these areas the zoos could not help. So far grizzlies have
not been successfully bred in confinement.

The grizzly is an educational factor of enormous potential value. An
acquaintance with him will give a lively interest in the whole world of
nature, in both natural history and the natural resources of the earth.
A knowledge of these will increase the enjoyment and the usefulness of
every one.

In learning natural history the grizzly might well be the first life
studied. Interest in him could be used to arouse interest in all life.
In the very beginnings of interest in any living thing there is a desire
for information concerning its food. Soil, directly or indirectly,
produces the entire food-supply of the earth. Thus the trail of the
grizzly bear would lead one to the wonderful story of soil-creation and
the strange, almost enchanting powers it has over our strange existence.

For the young, and perhaps for the older, the grizzly has qualities
which should make him the supreme mental stimulus of the great outdoors.
A better acquaintance with him will be beneficial of itself, and an
interest in him would inevitably extend to his wild neighbors and to the
whole wide world of beauty and grandeur wherein he lives his adventurous
life.

The eagle, our emblematic bird, has prowess; he soars, he dares the
storm, and he explores the cloud scenery of the sky. He makes an appeal
to the interest of a few, but the bear stirs the minds and the hearts of
many. In most respects the grizzly would rival the eagle for an
emblematic animal and would excel all animals in arousing a nature
interest around the world.

Perpetuate the grizzly in our wild places and National Parks, and this
will fill all wild scenes again with their appealing primeval spell--the
master touch which stirs the imagination. An educator has called the
imagination "the supreme intellectual faculty"; it is creative,
original, refreshing. The imagination will be alive so long as the
grizzly lives.

In art alone the grizzly is a subject worthy of the sculptor. He will
help quicken and develop the creative imagination of any one who knows
him--the grizzly of heroic art.

The grizzly probably heads the animal list in brain-power. He is still
developing. He appreciates play and he has marked individuality. He is
the greatest animal that is without a voice. Stories of "this animal
that walks like man" ever appeal; he is the most impressive animal on
the continent. He is the dominant and the most distinguished animal of
the world.


THE END




Index


  Abundance, 231.
  Accordion, 177, 178.
  Acrobatic pranks, 13.
  Adams, James Capen, 166, 170, 196, 207, 251;
    quoted, 196, 220, 242;
    and his pet grizzlies, 216-21, 242.
  Adventure, 185.
  Age, 58, 59.
  Agility, 253.
  Alaska, 53, 54, 205, 206, 248-50, 259-61, 281.
  Ants, 107.
  Arizona, 150, 151.
  Audubon, John James, quoted, 198.

  Bear, black, and hard-tack, 7;
    and grizzly cubs, 114, 115, 212, 222, 223;
    colors, 251;
    contrasted with the grizzly, 254, 255.
  Bear, polar, 94, 249.
  Bears, origin and evolution, 247, 248.
  Bears, big brown, 257-69.
  Beaver, 29.
  "Ben Franklin," 216-21.
  Brackenridge, Henry M., 256;
    quoted, 199.

  Cactus, 150, 151.
  Can, tin, 6.
  Carson, Kit, 196.
  Catsup, 213.
  Cattle-killing, 13, 14, 73, 75, 76, 155-58, 275, 276.
  Caution, 72, 157-62.
  Chapman, Frank M., 170.
  Classification, 249, 256-69.
  Claw-marks on trees, 47-49, 131.
  Claws, 253, 254.
  Clinton, DeWitt, 256;
    quoted, 202, 203.
  "Clubfoot," 14.
  Coasting, 126, 127, 144, 145.
  Colors, 249-51.
  Courage, 17, 18, 191.
  Cow, dead, 7-9.
  Coyote, 146.
  Cubs, and dead mother, 23-25;
    birth and nurture, 25, 26;
    size, 25, 26;
    color, 27;
    care and training from mother, 27-29;
    experiences with, 29-37;
    weaning, 31, 32;
    mimicry, 32;
    play, 35, 36;
    eating honey, 37;
    family ties, 37, 38;
    selection of home territory, 43.
    _See also_ Pets.
  Curiosity, 54, 55, 175-87.

  Death, 59, 60.
  Dens. _See_ Hibernation.
  Digging, 3, 4, 71, 125, 126, 131, 132.
  Dignity, 233.
  Disposition, 236-38.
  Distribution, 248-50.
  Dogs, 109-11, 163, 217-19.
  Drummond, Thomas, 175, 176, 196.

  Economic value, 275-78.
  Eluding followers, 4, 5, 243.
    _See also_ Trailing.
  Exploration, 56, 57.

  Feet, 253, 254.
  Feigning death, 14.
  Ferocity, undeserved reputation for, 192-206.
  Figgins, J. D., on hibernation, 94-98.
  Fighting qualities, 204, 205.
  Fire, 179, 180.
  Fish, catching, 69, 70, 234.
  Food and feeding-habits, 63-77, 82, 92, 93, 105-07, 206, 230, 231,
    236-39, 275, 276.
  Form, 251, 252.
  Fur, 251.

  Gait, 15, 252.
  Garbage, 206, 236-39.
  Glacier National Park, 237.
  Grace, 252.

  Hallett Glacier, 81.
  Hammock, 179.
  Hard-tack, 7.
  Headache, 235.
  Hearing, 6, 229, 230.
  Hibernation, 52, 81-98, 215, 216.
  Home territory, 38, 39, 43-53.
  Hornaday, William T., quoted, 197.
  Hunting, 161-70, 277, 278.

  Indians, 203, 255.
  Intelligence, 3-19, 243, 244.

  Jenny. _See_ Johnny.
  Johnny and Jenny, 101-15.

  "Lady Washington," 242.
  Lewis and Clark, 53, 176, 192, 197, 256;
    quoted, 199-202.
  Lion, mountain, 52.
  Log, 139-43.

  McClelland, George, 165.
  McGuire, J. A., 277;
    quoted, 278.
  MacKenzie, Sir Alexander, 256;
    quoted, 198.
  Magpie, 141.
  Maimed, 17.
  Man, as an enemy, 17, 18;
    not eaten by the grizzly, 76, 77;
    attacked, 162-70.
  Mating, 255.
  Merriam, Dr. C. Hart, quoted, 257-69.
  Migration, 57.
  "Miss Grizzly," 211-16.
  "Miss Jim" and "Mr. Bessie," 221-26.
  "Mose, Old," 155, 156.
  Mud, 143, 144.
  Muir, John, 170, 194;
    quoted, 194, 195.
  Music, 177, 178.

  Names, 256.
  National Parks, 280-82.
  Nutcracker, Clarke, 141.

  Ord, George, 256.
  _Outdoor Life_, 277.

  Pets, 101-15, 211-26, 240-42.
  Pies, 225.
  Play, 54, 139-52.
  Pocock, Roger, quoted, 274, 275.
  Protection, 273, 274, 280-83.

  Raspberries, 105-07.
  Rifles, 203.
  Rocking-chair, 112.
  Rollins, Philip Ashton, 207, 221;
    quoted, 222-26.
  Roosevelt, Theodore, 170.
  Roping, 167.

  Sagacity, 3-19, 243, 244.
  "Samson," 251.
  _Saturday Evening Post,_ quoted, 277.
  Sawmill, 211, 212.
  Scenery, 186, 187.
  Scotch, the collie, 109-11.
  Scott, William B., quoted, 247.
  Senses, 5, 6, 229, 230.
  Sensitiveness, 229, 230.
  Seton, Ernest Thompson, 170.
  Shadow, 147-49.
  Sheep, mountain, 35, 72, 73.
  Sheldon, Charles, quoted, 248, 249.
  Size, 251, 252.
  Skin of soles of feet, 91.
  Slicker, 180, 181.
  Smell, sense of, 6, 230.
  Social life, 45, 46, 53.
  Solitariness, 44, 149.
  Strength, 252, 253.
  Swimming, 50, 51.

  "Three-Toes," 14.
  "Timberline," 46, 47, 119-35.
  Tooth-marks on trees, 47-49, 131.
  Toothache, 235.
  Tracks, 253, 254
  Trailing, 9-13, 49, 50, 56, 57, 119-36, 146-49, 169, 170.
  Trapping, 157-60, 162.

  Umbrellas, 109, 182.
  Umfreville, Edward, quoted, 198, 256.

  Voice, 255.

  Wheel, 182.
  Wolves, 16, 17.
  Wright, William H., 164, 170, 195, 207;
    quoted, 195, 196, 226, 238, 239.

  Yellowstone Park, 58, 206, 232-39, 280.




  The Riverside Press
  CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
  U . S . A

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TRANSCRIBER NOTES:


     Archaic, alternate spellings (including hyphenation), and obsolete
     words have been retained with the exception of those listed below.

     Page 120: "railing" changed to "trailing" (The most impressive
     thing I had early learned in trailing and studying the grizzly).


     Page 175: "observavation" changed to "observation" (In old bears
     curiosity is accompanied with a keenness of observation).