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Polar Bears in Canada: Trailing the world’s largest carnivore

Melting ice forces polar bears onto mainland Canada every year, where they can sometimes be viewed at very close quarters, as an awestruck Jolyon Attwooll finds out.

There was, perhaps, the length of a football pitch between me and the world’s largest terrestrial carnivore. Just in front of me the imposing shape of our guide, “Butch” Saunders paused sharply, one hand clasping the Winchester 303 rifle slung over his shoulder. Ahead, one ton of polar bear was rising onto its haunches.

Instinctively, we followed Butch’s lead, silencing the squelch of boots in the dark, sulphurous mud. The bear scanned the horizon, somehow aware that more than just the sub-Arctic wind was intruding into its afternoon repose.

For a fleeting moment, seared forever on my mind, its gaze fell on three puny human forms, motionless on the tidal flat grass. Planting one huge paw in front, it shortened the length of the football pitch. Then its enormous form wheeled around and it ambled toward the sanctuary of Hudson Bay, just as we backtracked urgently to the safety of a larger cluster of humans behind.

It was late summer in northern Manitoba, when polar bears are forced on to the mainland by the melting Hudson Bay ice. There, amid the beach ridges of spruce conifers – a strikingly different backdrop to the snow and ice with which they are normally associated – the bears migrate northwards, either to mate or await the colder weather and a return to their natural icy hunting ground. Our group of 11, plus four guides, had come to witness this migration, at spell-bindingly close range – which later in our trip would become closer still.

We were on the south-western shore of the bay, a short distance east of York Factory, formerly the headquarters of that Canadian commercial powerhouse, the Hudson’s Bay Company. Described as “a small pocket of civilisation at the edge of the world”, York Factory declined as the world’s appetite for fur dwindled in the late 19th century. Now restored, the whitewashed building is a Canadian National Historic Site, but remains uninhabited for much of the year. The 20th and early 21st centuries have, in fact, done little to alter the remoteness of this starkly beautiful region. Our base, Nanuk Lodge, a cluster of simple wooden cabins, lay 137 miles from the nearest paved road, accessible only by six-seater aircraft from Gillam, a settlement around a hydroelectric dam, or by a protracted, bumpy journey by four-wheel drive.

In Gillam we had our first sense of how much we were at the whim of this raw landscape. Stranded in the tiny airport lounge, our disparate group of Americans, Canadians and one “Brit” waited for fog to burn off at our destination. Like strangers on a broken-down train, we bonded over card games, amusement at the Gillam tourism brochure rack (gapingly empty) and frustration at our lack of movement – until the pilot came in, several hours later, to announce that the fog had lifted.

Transport came in ever diminishing forms: the transatlantic Boeing, then a smaller plane from Winnipeg, then the six-seater that eventually took off from Gillam, then Honda all-terrain tugging vehicles with seated trailers to the rear and, ultimately, Shank’s pony when movement needed to be quiet. The trailers were perhaps most memorable. At every dip of the land, every rock in the rivers we crossed, every mud-spattering wheel spin on the soft tidal flats, we roiled and rolled and slid in synchrony.

Few know these contours more intimately than our guides. Many, like Butch, are Canadian First Nations, from the Cree people, whose forefathers were among the trappers crucial to the success of York Factory. We would rely upon their knowledge of the land, good humour and unerring tracking skills.

At first, however, the bears were elusive. On an initial foray onto the expansive meadow-like grasses, we snatched a long-range glimpse of a lone “boar”– as males are known – lumbering toward the Hudson Bay with a brief backward glance toward us. But this was one only for those with mega-zooms and a steady hand – for the naked eye it was little more than a fuzzy white shape moving toward the horizon.

The bears’ coyness had an unexpected effect. Much of our talk had been of the creatures, fact blurring with legend as tales were swapped of their incredible olfactory feats, aggressive stalking – even, it was rumoured, of beluga whales – and characters (“scavengers, absolute scavengers”, according to one old hand). But, as we travelled a short distance from the Hudson Bay shore, with the grasslands giving way to lunar-like mudflats, our chance of a sighting that day faded.

Almost imperceptibly, other players on this sweeping stage began to make their presence felt. That guttural croak over there? Why, those are sandhill cranes, the monogamous birds that spend summer here. What’s that, flapping rapidly away from the mosquito-choked thicket? A short-eared owl. (“Didn’t you notice how short its ears were?”) And what’s that on the ground there? Huge paw prints pressed into the mud by wolves, interlaced with hoof marks of the caribou or moose they were stalking. Oh, and there’s a wild strawberry (deliciously sweet), and the striking purple flower of the Indian paintbrush. While we’re stopped here, would you like to hold this bald eagle feather we’ve just found?

Soon we took our first, faltering steps into deciphering some of the clues of the wilderness. “Look, I can tell that’s a moose track.” “No, that’s definitely caribou – look at the way it is cleft.” I hazarded a guess at the source of a small collection of bones: “Is it from a wolf cub?” No – one of our guides identified the skeleton as a goose backbone.

The polar bears, we realised, were merely playing a bit-part in this landscape’s drama, as they passed through on their way back to their natural icy stamping grounds. They might be the world’s largest carnivore, but here they were vulnerable – many do not eat for the entire summer, fasting until they return to their usual seal-rich diet. Indeed, here they are arguably not even top of the food chain, a spot fiercely guarded by the wolf.

Yet, the polar bears’ cameo was the one we were all here to see – and we had still not seen them close up. As the season advances, bears often come right up to the perimeter fence of the lodge. But that was later, and on the third day, our last full one, our guides had a sense of urgency as they prepared to take us out. It had not, however, permeated all the visitors – a couple lingered too long over the home-cooked breakfast of French toast and maple syrup, delaying our departure. And so, to our guides’ chagrin, the whole party found themselves cut off by the high tide of a nearby river delta, forced to while away time until the waters ebbed later that morning.

Some of the group went to inspect the remains of a beluga whale skeleton, beached and picked clean, a little way towards Hudson Bay. I trudged a little farther, pausing by a pool lapping a bank of gravelly sand before the bay. Idly, I scraped my wellington boots in the soft mud of the receding water, watching as bubbles filtered to the surface before noticing the brisk approach of the rotund shape of Gordy, one of our guides.

“You’re playing a very dangerous game, my friend,” he chided as he drew near. “If a bear was on the other side,” he said, gesturing towards the sand bank, “you wouldn’t even see him before he got you – they can run at 30 kilometres an hour.”

Chastened, although slightly disbelieving, I headed back to the vehicles (I later checked and they can actually run even faster – Usain Bolt would comfortably be reeled in by a polar bear at full tilt).

After I heard of the bears’ speed on dry land, we finally crossed the river – and Butch highlighted their prowess in the water, indicating a white speck moving swiftly through the bay (in addition to their land speed, polar bears have been known to swim more than 150 miles non-stop). As we sat watching on logs by the shore, we started to wonder if this was as close as we would get.

And then, a veritable bear bonanza was under way. Where most of us could just see endless tidal flats, Butch saw polar bears – and lots of them. Inching nearer on the all-terrain vehicles, we cut the engines – and, impatient to get closer, I volunteered to follow Butch on foot, along with a Californian student photojournalist. After that exhilarating first encounter less than a football pitch away, we thought perhaps that the best was over. It wasn’t. Later, the whole group dismounted the vehicles and we concealed ourselves in the foliage of a mosquito-infested ancient beach ridge. Gooseberry thorns pierced my legs; then a plaintive cry of “I’ve got a bug in my pants” rang out from nearby scrub – I wasn’t the only one in discomfort.

Neither insects nor prickly bushes could distract from the mesmerising scene that followed, however. On the far side of a rough meadow, a sow nosed out into a clearing, with two young cubs in tow. Tentatively, she edged forward, sniffing the air, anxious to steer clear of several nearby boars. Making her way around the edge, she turned towards us, head raised. Perhaps it was a superfluous rustle – a gooseberry thorn or bug too far – but something spooked her. Breaking into a run, she veered toward the tree cover, her offspring gambolling behind. In one unforgettable movement, she reared onto her hind legs, her white body framed by a spruce behind as she surveyed the area for threats. Then she dropped back onto all-fours and moved swiftly away through a shield of trees, her infants still on her tail.

The incident dominated the dinner-table talk that evening as we tucked into tender steaks and Norwegian apple pie. Later, we watched the aurora borealis flicker, then dance in the night sky. A proper description remained as nebulous as ever, so I took to outlining the shapes they formed. On the left, look that’s a brontosaurus, while on the right, yes, that’s definitely the subject from Munch’s The Scream.

Perhaps the last vestiges of that game were still drifting in my subconscious the next day, as I gazed out from the tiny plane at the lodge and its hospitable staff disappearing below. We stayed low at first, spotting a few polar bears and the rusting hulk of a centuries-old wreck on a final fly-by. Then, with the aircraft rising as the tidal flats ebbed into taiga forest, I began to trace the shapes of the boreal landscape below. That game, too, had to stop as the human-wrought forms of a giant hydroelectric project and the functional grey of the purpose-built surrounding town eventually shifted into view – man-made shapes re-emerging from the wild.

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Report says too many grizzly bears killed in unsustainable B.C. trophy hunt

VANCOUVER, B.C. – British Columbia’s controversial annual grizzly bear hunt leaves more of the animals dead than even the province’s own wildlife guidelines allow, claims a new report by the David Suzuki Foundation that once again calls on the government to curb the trophy hunt.

The report was released Thursday – on the first day of this year’s grizzly hunt when hundreds of the bears will be killed by trophy hunters around the province, something critics have maintained is unsustainable and must stop.

“This is new science that really questions the sustainability of the hunt,” Faisal Moola of the foundation said in an interview.

“This is a disaster in the waiting. If we do not act to protect the species given what we know about its vulnerabilities, we may no longer have bears.”

The report uses provincial government records to examine the number of grizzly bears that were killed by humans between 2004 and 2008 and compares them with the province’s own limits for what it calls the allowable human-caused mortality rate.

B.C.’s grizzly bears are divided into 57 different population areas.

The report says in 20 of those areas, hunting alone accounted for more grizzly deaths than the province’s allowable mortality rates at least once during the five-year period of the study.

When combined with other human-caused grizzly deaths – including legal kills by wildlife management officials and illegal poaching – the mortality rates were exceeded at least once in 36 areas, or 63 per cent.

That higher number, said Moola, is the most important, because it shows that too many bears are killed even when the hunt doesn’t push the grizzly deaths over the limits.

“You can’t look at trophy hunting in isolation – you have to look at trophy hunting in addition to the other sources of human-caused mortality,” said Moola.

“What the study shows is that if you removed trophy hunting from the picture, you would actually drop the mortality rate below what the government thinks is sustainable.”

The report is accompanied by a letter to Premier Gordon Campbell, signed by eight grizzly bear experts from Canada and the United States, urging the provincial government to establish a provincewide network of no-hunting zones.

British Columbia is estimated to be home to half of all grizzlies in Canada, and a quarter of the North American grizzly population.

B.C.’s grizzlies are considered a species of “special concern” by both the federal and provincial governments because of their slow reproductive rates and susceptibility to human activities.

Grizzly hunting is restricted in parts of the province, but every year a trophy hunt opens up throughout much of British Columbia during the spring and fall. The David Suzuki Foundation report estimates that, since 2001, an average of 253 bears a year have been killed by hunters in B.C.

There have been perennial calls for the hunt to be scrapped, but the Liberal government has consistently rejected those calls, arguing the hunt is sustainable and properly managed.

In 2001, the NDP government of the day implemented a moratorium on grizzly hunting, but that was overturned a few months later after the Liberals took power.

Environment Minister Barry Penner issued a written statement defending the province’s grizzly management policies, insisting hunting wouldn’t be allowed if it jeopardized the bear population.

Penner, who acknowledged he hadn’t read the report and has told his ministry staff to review it, said the mortality rates set by the province are stricter than the standards recommended by peer-reviewed scientific studies of the region’s grizzly population.

“Our record on grizzly bear population management is strong,” he said.

“The independent Grizzly Bear Scientific Panel, comprised of independent bear experts appointed on the recommendation of the International Association for Bear Research and Management, confirmed that B.C.’s grizzly bear management approach is effective and that our population estimates are sound. ”

He also noted the province has closed almost two million hectares of land to grizzly hunting along the North and Central Coasts, and there are other strict no-kill zones elsewhere in the province.

Hunting and outfitting groups sent out their own news releases responding to the report, challenging the study’s conclusions and defending the hunt as sustainable and important to the province’s economy.

Mel Arnold of the B.C. Wildlife Federation, which represents hunters and anglers, said harvest rates are set over five-year periods, so it’s wrong to point to figures from a single year as evidence that too many bears were killed.

“They (the five-year averages) may fall above it in some areas, and if that is the case, we would support adjustments being made,” Arnold said in an interview.

“Hunting and trapping is part of the heritage that built this country, and it’s part of our culture.”

There are differing opinions on the health of bear populations in British Columbia, and conservation groups such as the David Suzuki Foundation suggest the government’s current methods to estimate how bears are actually roaming the wilderness are flawed.

Alberta placed a moratorium on grizzly bear hunting in 2006, and is currently examining whether to keep the ban or revisit the issue.

Last year, the Manitoba government added grizzly bears to a list of species protected under the provincial wildlife act.

Grizzly bears have been extinct from Manitoba for a century, but migrant bears from Nunavut have been spotted, raising hopes the species is making a return.

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Arkansas keeping close track of its black bears

JESSIEVILLE, Ark. — On a recent Monday afternoon, field biologists Wade Walker and Matt Mourot of the Arkansas Game & Fish Commission carefully approached an open rock crevice in a stunningly scenic portion of the Ouachita Mountains.

They planned to use a blowgun to tranquilize the female black bear inside the crevice, so they could safely study her and any cubs she might be tending.

But momma bear wasn’t totally down with the plan.

When Walker fired the shot from the blowgun, the bear let out an ominous growl and lunged at the biologists, who fled from the den in fear.

“I thought she was coming out of there,” said Walker, his heart rate obviously elevated. “They don’t do that very often.”

After another dart with a stronger dosage, the mother bear fell into a deep, peaceful sleep, and the biologists were able to enter the den.

They emerged with a 6-pound bear cub that would be a total delight for the crowd of spectators for the next 90 minutes.

“Every time we do one of these den surveys, people just can’t get enough of these cubs,” said Myron Means, coordinator of the AGFC‘s bear program. “We learn a lot from these surveys — and people just really get a kick out of handling these bears.”

The black bear population in Arkansas is rock-solid, with an estimated 4,000 bears roaming the Ozark Mountains, the Ouachita Mountains and a small area along the White River.

But the bear population once fell to dangerously low numbers — and the den surveys are designed to make sure it never happens again.

The Bear State?

Black bears were so plentiful in 19th-century Arkansas that it was known as “The Bear State” instead of “The Natural State” as it’s known today.

But those native bears were hunted nearly to extinction by people who needed light and heat.

“A lot of people think the Arkansas bears were hunted out for meat by people who wanted them for food,” Means said. “But they were actually over-hunted because of the oil that their fat produces. The only way people could get oil for heat or light was from bear fat or whale blubber.”

Bear fat was such a valuable commodity that by the mid-1950s, there were only about 50 bears remaining in Arkansas.

That’s when a massive restocking effort began in the Ozarks and the Ouachitas, with bears being brought in from Minnesota and Manitoba, Canada.

“The bears along the White River are believed to be the only native bears remaining in Arkansas.” Means said. “The others are from the restocking efforts. But as a whole, the bear population in Arkansas is doing very well.”

Amazing comeback

The recovery of the Arkansas bear is actually considered one of the world’s most successful large carnivore re-introduction programs.

It worked so well that in 1980, the state determined it had enough bears to once again allow an annual organized hunting season. That season has been held ever since — and last year, Arkansas hunters harvested a record 533 black bears.

“The bear population is doing very well, and bear hunting is growing in popularity to the point that it’s becoming a staple sport,” Means said. “We have people coming here from Tennessee, Ohio, Missouri — you name it. They’re traveling to Arkansas from all over the country to hunt bears.”

That increased interest in bear hunting is one more reason why Means and company must keep a close eye on the state’s bear numbers.

That’s where the den studies play a vital role.

Learning about bears

Every year during summer, AGFC biologists trap female bears and fit them with radio collars. Then during late winter and early spring, they use telemetry equipment to locate the female bears inside their dens.

With the bears located, they use tranquilizer darts to put them into a deep — but definitely temporary — sleep. This allows biologists to check the health of the adult bear and change the batteries in her radio collar if necessary.

It also allows the biologists to count the cubs, study their health and take important measurements like weight, paw length and width, body length and girth and head width.

“By taking the same measurements from all the cubs we study, we can develop a model for what they should be,” Means said. “We know what a healthy weight is, and if we come across a cub that’s not healthy, we can investigate and try to find out why.”

Bears in the Ozark Mountains are dependant mostly on fall mast crops like acorns and usually have just two cubs. In the Ouachita Mountains, they have hard mast and soft mast like berries and fruits, so they tend to produce three cubs.

The bear they studied in the Ouachita Mountain on March 8 is known affectionately by the biologists as “McKenzie.” She usually has three cubs but this time had only one.

“This is the first time we’ve ever found a mother bear with just one cub,” Means said. “That tells us that reproduction is down for this particular bear. It’s something we’ll need to keep an eye on — not only with this bear but in this region.”

Still, for the spectators, one cub was plenty.

“I would really love to take this little guy (it was actually a female) home with me,” said Haley Hall, a young visitor from Little Rock. “This is one of the cutest things I’ve ever seen in my life.”

JUST THE BEAR FACTS

Adult female black bears usually weigh less than 300 pounds. Full-grown males weigh between 400 and 700 pounds.

Bears have poor eyesight but an extraordinary sense of smell.

They are one of Arkansas’ most intelligent mammals.

The lifespan for a black bear in the wild is about 25 years.

Contrary to popular belief, black bears are not true hibernators like woodchucks or ground hogs.

Instead of shutting their systems down completely, bears go into periods of deep sleep with slow-moving metabolisms. But they can arouse out of that state immediately.

Bears don’t go into their periods of deep sleep in response to cold weather but rather when food is no longer available.

Black bears go through their gestation period under a full fast, meaning they nurse their cubs while they’re fasting. They don’t eat or drink anything for 41/2 months and nurse their cubs all the while. Because adult female bears drink no water while they’re nursing cubs, their milk is very rich, and cubs gain as much as a pound a week.

Bears breed during the summer months, and males cover large areas searching for females. Young are born in the winter den. Mother and cubs emerge from the den by mid-May, and the cubs begin learning about life in the wild.

Cubs den with their mothers again the following winter and stay with her until the next summer when she finally drives them away.

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Wild pigs migrate north, possibly into Montana

Pigs aren’t usually animals people think they have to worry about. But wild pigs could change that if they make it into Montana.

This animal, also known as wild hog, wild boar or feral pig, has been stirring up a ruckus in almost every U.S. state and Canadian province. Wildlife biologists fear that Montana, one of only five states without feral pigs, could be the next state these swine sweep into.

Alhough feral pigs are considered a game animal in some states, they are considered a pest in others.

After working as the chief of wildlife management for Manitoba, Brian Knudsen made feral pigs his main concern. Knudsen was working with a group of researchers from Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Kansas who gathered feral pig population statistics, and he became so interested with the problem that he made it part of his life’s work.

Knudsen now runs Knudsen Wildlife Management Systems in Manitoba, where he offers consulting for wildlife management problems. While this pays the bills, Knudsen focuses his personal research on the spread of feral pigs with the Northern Feral Pig Project.

Pigs came with the Spanish when they took control of the southeast United States in the 1500s. Some pigs were fenced in while others were released as game animals. Then about 20 to 30 years ago, Knudsen said, people began to notice the wild pig population was expanding.

In the mid-1990s, Knudsen mapped the spread of feral pigs. His study found that pigs had reached Kansas and Missouri, a significant shift north. Knudsen said the pigs spread because hunters trapped and loaded groups into livestock trucks, then drove them to other states and released them.

A recent survey conducted by Knudsen showed that the pigs had spread into Manitoba, Alberta, British Columbia, Michigan and Wisconsin.

North Dakota veterinary officials had to eradicate a herd of pigs in 2008. The officials used traps and had to shoot pigs from helicopters in what Knudsen said was an “almost military-like” extermination. He said the important message was that those were the measures they had to take to get rid of the animals.

Knudsen commended North Dakota for being organized and realizing how serious the problem was so they could take control of it so quickly.

“This is what needs to be done,” Knudsen said. “It’s a model that states like Montana can follow with profit.”

It is unknown when or how the pigs will enter Montana. Knudsen said it could be next year or 20 years from now. But the most important thing, he said, is having a plan for when the time comes. He compared it to having a fire department: “It’s there in case you need it.”

“You can hold them off,” Knudsen said. “Southern states will never get rid of them. Montana and North Dakota, if they are ready, they can hold them off.”

Several varieties of pigs are actually the same species. Eurasian boars and domestic pigs look different but interbreed successfully, Knudsen said.

One of the reasons they are such successful pests is that sows can have one to two litters a year with about nine to 15 piglets per litter.  Knudsen said that sows are good mothers and keep the pig survival rate high.

Pigs are also very intelligent, he said. If pigs survive a trap encounter, they will not return to another trap like it.

An evenly distributed layer of body fat helps keep them alive in the United States colder northern regions where people didn’t think the animals could survive because they lack a heavy fur coat.

Feral pigs root around, digging up food in the soil. If they do this around streams, their feces can get into the watershed. Weeds can thrive in the upturned dirt. They also destroy the nests of ground-nesting birds, which could threaten native bird species.

“There is no co-existing,” Knudsen said.

It was Knudsen who sounded the alarm to Missoula bear specialist and biologist Chuck Jonkel. Jonkel said many people in Missoula hadn’t heard of the feral pig problem.

“People keep asking me why I am calling bears ‘pigs,’” Jonkel said.

Jonkel and Knudsen are old friends, and in a meeting several years ago, Knudsen shared his concern for Montana’s wildlife safety. Jonkel said he took it upon himself to raise the alarm that feral pigs are a looming threat to Montana’s habitat, and as far as he knows, the state hasn’t done anything about it.

“The state ought to be proactive and have a wild pig project ready so they are ready to roll,” Jonkel said.

Known for his work with grizzly bears, Jonkel said the pigs would affect other state-protected wildlife, including bears. He said pigs would compete directly with bears for food, and because the pigs reproduce fast and bears reproduce relatively slow, the pigs could easily outnumber the bears within a short amount of time.

Jonkel said trophy hunters want bigger boars, so hunters will run the show if they have a population of pigs to lobby for. He said he thinks that Montana should categorize the pigs as a pest before the hunting community can get behind them. He said states that make the pigs a game animal end up with thousands of pigs, and by that point, it’s too late to get rid of them.

“Once they get established, they are formidable,” Jonkel said.

Jonkel said a study he read listed only six states without feral pigs, including Wyoming and Montana, but he has heard there are populations in Wyoming, which would make it just five states.

Jonkel said a few years ago, a group of domestic pigs escaped and got out of control in the Grant Creek area. A friend of Jonkel’s who worked with the state then had to go into the area and shoot all the pigs before they established themselves further.

“He just blew them all away, and that’s what the state has to be ready to do,” Jonkel said. “Kill them right away with state employees.”

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Into the wild

Glen Chilton obsesses about the beleaguered labrador duck while Lil Anderson recalls pond memories in a pair of new books

Pity the labrador duck. The mussel-eating waterfowl had the bad luck to winter in places such as New York harbour and Chesapeake Bay. It’s been extinct for more than a hundred years.

Glen Chilton is a ornithologist and behavioural ecologist. He studied at the universities of Manitoba and Calgary.

He’s also, he readily admits, something of an obsessive. Volunteering to write an encyclopedia article about the little known Camptorhynchus labradorius, he was compelled to dig up every detail he could find. The result of his obsession is The Curse of the Labrador Duck (Harper Collins).

He wound determined to examine every stuffed labrador duck he could find – something like four-and-a-half dozen. After peeking and poking (his words) Canadian specimens, he traveled from Philadelphia to St. Petersburg, with stops in England, Dublin, Germany, Vienna, Prague and George Sand’s hometown.

Now, Chilton is a very gifted storyteller which makes this book, about an obsessive ornithologist hunting every example he could find of a little-known extinct duck, far more entertaining than it should be. Ridiculously fun.

Along the way, there are bad hotels, mysterious duck eggs, bemused train ticket sellers in Limoges and a fake quacker in Halberstadt. Plus, he’s a offering a $10,000 reward for a stuffed labrador duck he hasn’t seen yet.

. . .

Some books are just charming. Lil Anderson’s Pond Memories: More Tails from a Wildlife Rehabilitator (Turnstone Press) is one.

Anderson, a wildlife technician for Ontario’s Ministry of Natural Resources, operates, with her husband, a Kenora-area rehab centre for wild animals. People call Anderson when they come across a wild animal in some distress, abandoned babies and the like.

That sounds like fun, but try bottle-feeding a baby porcupine or constructing a playpen for a baby moose. Anderson is wary of imprinting on her young charges, keeping in mind the dictum that these animals should return to their natural habitat.

Anderson is a delight. Her subjects are individuals but thankfully she never humanizes them. She writes about learning how to communicate with a diminutive fawn and what to do if a nervous pelican swallows a flashlight. There are sad moments, too, but also some touching reunions.

I’ll always remember the story of the fox kit returning for her favourite stuffed toy.

With photographs and drawings of Brownie the moose, Persephone the fawn, P’Silla the porcupette, and goslings Lucky and Janice as well as, Cameron, a bossy, very big beaver.

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Dogs that killed boy on reserve destroyed, chief says

Three dogs believed to have mauled a young boy to death on a northern Saskatchewan reserve were destroyed by the RCMP, the reserve’s chief said Monday.

Canoe Lake First Nation Chief Guy Lariviere said RCMP on the scene had to destroy the dogs because they returned to the scene before officials could remove the child’s body.

The boy, who family members identified as 10-year-old Keith Iron, was attacked around 11:30 a.m. Saturday as he walked to his cousin’s house on the reserve, which is about 300 kilometres north of North Battleford.

Earlier reports suggested that a pack of

wild dogs had attacked Iron. But Lariviere said the dogs were owned by residents in the community, who are badly shaken by the incident.

“What happened on Saturday affected everybody in the community, including the leadership, (and) especially the owners of those dogs, they’re really feeling pained at what happened,” Lariviere told reporters Monday afternoon.

“It was an awful thing to see, but we’re trying to deal with it in the community and see how we can make sure something like that doesn’t happen again.”

According to Lariviere, the reserve has a bylaw that calls for dangerous dogs to be tied up and stray dogs to be “gotten rid of as humanely as possible.”

He could not say what breed the dogs involved in the attack were, but he said members of the community had previously complained about the dogs’ aggressive behaviour.

The boy’s uncle, Lawrence Iron, told CTV News his nephew was attacked by the dogs as he walked to his cousin’s house — a trek he made nearly every morning.

“That’s where he was going, and on the way there, close to the house, a bunch of dogs attacked him,” Iron said. “It’s really hard, especially on the father and me as a brother. It’s hard on me too.”

The incident is the second dog attack in the province in less than a year.

Last fall, six-year-old Shiloh Berscheid was badly bitten by a pack of dogs as he played outside the village of Ile a la Crosse, Sask.

Berscheid had to be flown to a hospital in Saskatoon so plastic surgeons could close large gashes across his face. He received 60 stitches.

In 2006, five-year-old Alberta boy Lance Loonskin was mauled to death by a pack of dogs on the North Tallcree reserve.

And that same year, two boys were mauled to death in Manitoba. A two-year-old lost his life to a pack of dogs on the Hollow Water reserve, while a three-year-old boy was killed on the Sayisi reserve.

Dr. Richard Herbert, who works on improving infrastructure on First Nations communities in northern Ontario, said the problem is ubiquitous across Canada’s First Nations communities.

“It’s right across the board,” Herbert, of Christian Aboriginal infrastructure Developments (CAID), told CTV.ca in a telephone interview. ”All First Nations have the problem, and the more remote the First Nation, the worse the problem.”

According to Herbert, a major cause of the problem is a lack of infrastructure on reserves for dog management.

The federal government does not have an agency that can set up veterinary services on reserves, and reserves are not municipalities, so they cannot operate spay and neuter clinics, Herbert said.

And because dogs breed twice a year, the population explodes and becomes a nuisance to the community.

Domesticated dogs can get together with wild dogs and hunt in a pack, and the pack mentality can lead them to maim or kill a human.

“When dogs get together they change their behaviour and they start hunting as a pack. If the lead dog decides to choose a child to chase, the whole pack will hunt that child,” Herbert said.

“How do you protect yourself? I wouldn’t even know because if a dog pack came at you and just went into that frenzy, you’re going to die.”

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Out There: Rapids man’s dream hunt to be televised soon

Television viewers soon will have the chance to watch Pat Stashek’s dream hunt, but a few challenges almost kept it from being a success.

Footage of his September caribou hunting trip to Manitoba, Canada, will be aired starting Sunday on the “Escape to the Wild” program on the Versus network.Nominated for the trip by his wife, Kay, Pat, 53, of Wisconsin Rapids, got an all-inclusive trip from the hunting show, joining 30 other hunters at Noname Lake.

Each hunter was given two tags, and by the end of the second day, only four tags were filled.

“Nobody in camp was really seeing caribou,” Pat said.

“It was actually too warm for caribou hunting, because temperature triggers the caribou migration.”

The hunt was even more challenging for Pat because it was being filmed for the show, and certain criteria had to be followed.

By midafternoon of the last day, Pat and the filming crew boarded the float plane to scope the area for a bull.

“There is no cover out there, so you can see for miles,” he said.

And there it was. When all was in place, Pat dropped the caribou with one shot.

“I ran across the tundra to get to the animal,” he said. “I was just so happy.”
He and the show’s host, Tom Ackerman, exchanged “handshakes and the old man hug.”"I don’t think you could have wiped the smile off my face at that point,” Pat said.

Pat was told he got the biggest bull in camp during the three-week season, and it should qualify for the Boone and Crockett Club, which maintains records of native North American big game.

The men had to quarter and remove the hide in the field, no easy chore.

“I (carried out) the antlers, the head and the cape, and that was well over 100 pounds,” Pat said.

The meat, which he and his wife have been enjoying since his return, was estimated to weigh about 100 pounds.

“It’s the best game meat you’re going to eat,” he said. “Tastes a little sweeter than venison.”

While that taste will someday be a memory, he has other treasures as reminders. He received warm and cold outerwear, a wool sweater with wind-block lining, and a Beretta rifle.

Upon his return, he received a buck knife engraved with his name.

“I was supposed to get that in caribou camp, but they couldn’t spell ‘Stashek,’” he said.

Despite the challenges, the trip lived up to the outdoorsman’s dream.

“It was more than I thought and more than I expected,” he said.

Pat is having the head and antlers — estimated to be about 5 feet tall with a 3- to 4-foot spread — mounted in Canada, and sent to him at home.

“It’s a huge rack,” he said. “I told my wife we’re going to have to build a new house, or add on.”

Out There: Rapids man’s dream hunt to be televised soon

Television viewers soon will have the chance to watch Pat Stashek’s dream hunt, but a few challenges almost kept it from being a success.

Footage of his September caribou hunting trip to Manitoba, Canada, will be aired starting Sunday on the “Escape to the Wild” program on the Versus network.

Nominated for the trip by his wife, Kay, Pat, 53, of Wisconsin Rapids, got an all-inclusive trip from the hunting show, joining 30 other hunters at Noname Lake.

Each hunter was given two tags, and by the end of the second day, only four tags were filled.

“Nobody in camp was really seeing caribou,” Pat said.

“It was actually too warm for caribou hunting, because temperature triggers the caribou migration.”

The hunt was even more challenging for Pat because it was being filmed for the show, and certain criteria had to be followed.

By midafternoon of the last day, Pat and the filming crew boarded the float plane to scope the area for a bull.

“There is no cover out there, so you can see for miles,” he said.

And there it was. When all was in place, Pat dropped the caribou with one shot.

“I ran across the tundra to get to the animal,” he said. “I was just so happy.”

He and the show’s host, Tom Ackerman, exchanged “handshakes and the old man hug.”

“I don’t think you could have wiped the smile off my face at that point,” Pat said.

Pat was told he got the biggest bull in camp during the three-week season, and it should qualify for the Boone and Crockett Club, which maintains records of native North American big game.

The men had to quarter and remove the hide in the field, no easy chore.

“I (carried out) the antlers, the head and the cape, and that was well over 100 pounds,” Pat said.

The meat, which he and his wife have been enjoying since his return, was estimated to weigh about 100 pounds.

“It’s the best game meat you’re going to eat,” he said. “Tastes a little sweeter than venison.”

While that taste will someday be a memory, he has other treasures as reminders. He received warm and cold outerwear, a wool sweater with wind-block lining, and a Beretta rifle.

Upon his return, he received a buck knife engraved with his name.

“I was supposed to get that in caribou camp, but they couldn’t spell ‘Stashek,’” he said.

Despite the challenges, the trip lived up to the outdoorsman’s dream.

“It was more than I thought and more than I expected,” he said.

Pat is having the head and antlers — estimated to be about 5 feet tall with a 3- to 4-foot spread — mounted in Canada, and sent to him at home.

“It’s a huge rack,” he said. “I told my wife we’re going to have to build a new house, or add on.”

Hunting Season

You don’t just run out there and gun down the wary crow. Take time setting up. He has his blind spots. Learn to use them.

A pair of crows, their big mouths spieling out raucous threats, was tearing in from our right. “Take the front one,” I whispered to Gordie Pleiss, my hunting partner. Blamity blamm! echoed over the field. The pair collapsed in midair, thumping to the ground.

“They never saw us,” chuckled Gordie, stuffing in a new shell to replace the spent one.

“That just shows you how wrong you can be,” I laughed.

The crows were retrieved. They were the first of many to fall for the setup we’d thought impossible. By the time the sun was 10 o’clock high, a sizable stack of black marauders would be piled next to our blind. This first barrage was only the beginning.

Crow blinds are the most important part of successful crow shooting. They are equally as important as a duck blind or a goose blind, in my book – my theory being, the smaller and lower the better. Even if it means waiting and shooting from an uncomfortable position.

In 18 years of trying to outsmart crows, this one thing has been proved over and over. Shooting will be only as good as your preparation in building a blind.

Unfortunately, the best place to shoot crows is usually where there is a scarce amount of available cover. At least this is true in my part of Michigan, were farm fields offer little concealment. Gordie and I had run into this knotty problem on an early spring day last year.

The north-bound crows were just filtering into Michigan after spending their winter vacations south of the Mason-Dixon line. This particular spot was a cut over cornfield.

The crows were using it to supplement their meager spring rations. They were picking up corn left over from a mechanical picker. It was t a five-acre field, with nothing but an old barbed-wire fence and a few trees running through the center. We’d cased the place on numerous occasions; each time we’d given up. At times we’d shot a few crows by drawing them to the far edge, where sufficient cover offered concealment for a gunner.

When we’d arrived on Saturday morning there were about 150 crows frolicking around. Singles and doubles were dropping in quite regularly. Finally I couldn’t stand it any longer. In the back of the sta tion wagon was a brand-new 20-gauge shotgun. I’d gotten delivery on it on Wednesday and was bustin’ to try it out. We just had to figuic on a way to get at this noisy outfit.

Lookouts in trees are a must in crow shooting. Sentries give incoming crows the assurance all is well. They also can be seen a long way off.

“To heck with it,” I finally said, putting down the binocular. “Let’s try to make a blind with the camou flaged netting, right next to that tree. That way we’ll be protected from the right, and if we keep it low, we can pull up some grass to give it a natural look.”

“What can we lose?” agreed my partner.

I slung the carrying case over my shoulder, and after Gordie grabbed the guns, we set out across the field.

Crows lifted in a screaming mass, hollering about being disturbed from their morning breakfast. Dig ging out two rotten fence posts, we propped them up, stringing the 20-foot piece of camouflaged netting around them. With two six-foot pieces of light metal tubing, carried for just this purpose, we made enough room to shoot from a kneeling position.

A made-over mosquito-netting tent is the most important part of an effective crow rig, it can be used anywhere as a base to build from.

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The Varmint Rifle

There’s a “perfect” rifle for every man; but it takes study, time and know-how to find it

There are two broad, general schools of traditional varmint-hunting devotees. For this particular narrative we shall classify them in this manner, anyway, to spare you a belaboring of way-out aspects of the game. The first type we’ll define as “The Stalker.” This good chap gets his jollies by stealthily approaching Farmer Rogowski’s north pasture in quest of a grizzled trophy-type woodchuck. He cautiously peeks through the hedgerow with the skill of a Sioux warrior contemplating a mayhem on a hapless sodbuster. When our hero locates a good woodchuck specimen munching away with contented abandon on Brother Rogowski’s alfalfa, his joy knows no bounds. With exaggerated concern, he moistens a forefinger and tests the wind with the care of a top grizzly guide. He observes the contour of the terrain and mentally notes each bush, tree, knoll and other area of concealment. His purpose is to get as close as possible to the quarry.

     When he achieves this (and it isn’t easy to do), he is often within 50 feet of the trophy. He sometimes shoots it in the head or neck, carefully placing his bullet for the ideal instantaneous kill. His rifle? It more often than not is a .22 rimfire with open sights.

     The other breed of varmint hunter, extravagantly overwhelming in numbers (and popularity), we can safely refer to as “The Rifleman.” While his ultimate goal (a clean kill) is the same as the Stalker’s, he goes at it a bit differently. His objective (in a manner of speaking) is to get, within reasonable limits, as far from the mark as seems prudent. Instead of stalking-type terrain, he seeks a good open shot – with a safe background so that his bullet fragments (in the event of a miss) will not jeopardize person, beast or property. In passing, varmint bullets from high-velocity rifles do not ricochet, as do .22s and other low velocity cartridges – hence, they are safe even in settled areas.

     But to resume - the farther away from the chuck (or whichever) The Riffleman can get, within the capabilities of his rifle, the better he likes it. His rifle, It’s a flat-shooting precision centerfire with telescope sight. He often locates his varmint with binocular and even studies it with spotting scope (checking mirage). He has to learn to be an excellent judge of distance and wind, else he’ll miss more than a hit. (Many advanced varmint hunters would just as soon have a close miss as a hit. If they strike within an inch or two of the chuck, they consider it a hit.)

     It is significant that in each instance the technique strongly resembles that of serious big-game hunting. It is no secret that long-experienced varmint hunters are the most successful big-game trophy hunters on the continent. For when the chips are done, they rarely fail to anchor their ram, grizzly or other species. Woodchuck hunting is, these days, the very best training for big-game markmanship, for the methods are quite similar – and any fellow used to knocking off a wary woodchuck with regularity is going to have no trouble getting a bullet into the lung cavity of big game. Even if he has a “touch of the buck,” as all humans do on occasion, he automatically and subconsciously shoots well, because of his long training in the field with comparatively tiny beasts at unknown ranges. Not to say that other varmint hunting isn’t excellent too - such as gunning for jackrabbits, coyotes, crows, marpies, prairie dogs, ground squirrels and so forth. It is all good and all fun.

     I have employed both techniques, but my interest is irrevocably entrenched in that of the Rifleman. I get no particular kick out of stalking close to varmints, unless it is for study or photographic purposes. This is merely a matter of personal preference, nothing more, and is akin to the fact that some guys get a glazed look at the sight a voluptuous blonde whereas others assume the expression of a stricken moose calf when they feast their eyes upon a svelte brunette.

     I have an affliction concerning rifles that could best be described as a recurring ailment. We’ve all heard tales of how the moon affects animals and people. A well-designed and accurate example of the gun art is a source of infinite joy and satisfaction to its owner.

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