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Grizzly's 2,800-mile Montana, Idaho ramble intrigues experts

The roomful of biologists had lots of funny ideas why Ethyl the grizzly bear logged 2,800 miles arcing from Coeur d�Alene, Idaho, past Florence and Missoula and eventually up to Eureka by way of Glacier National Park.

Maybe she ate a bad chicken. Or she was looking for someone she couldn�t find. Or she couldn�t find her back to her home range northeast of Bigfork � the one place she noticeably missed in the three-year ramble.

�The one thing we can say is this was not representative of normal bear movement, and certainly not female grizzly bear movement,� said Chris Servheen, grizzly bear recovery program coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. �She had some really bizarre travels.�

Actually, there�s one more thing we can say about Ethyl. The 20-year-old sow proved grizzly bears can cross interstate highways, major city boundaries, municipal landfills and residential backyards without getting into trouble with humans.

That�s important to the wildlife managers of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee, whose Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem subcommittee members were meeting in Missoula on Tuesday.

It adds hope that the big omnivores can coexist with people as their numbers start pushing out of their wilderness core habitat.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks biologist Rick Mace joked that Ethyl seemed to be traveling with a �Be People-Aware� brochure and a can of people-spray on her journey. Apparently she�d learned her lesson after being caught and collared in 2006 and 2012.

Ethyl spent most of her life around Lake Blaine, between Bigfork and the Swan Mountains. After her first capture while raiding an apple orchard, she was relocated to the Wounded Buck Creek drainage along Hungry Horse Reservoir.

She came back and was traveling with her 2-year-old cub when she was busted again in the apples in 2012. This time, the duo was moved to the more remote Puzzle Creek drainage.

And then Ethyl took off.

She prowled around the Bob Marshall Wilderness for a while, including a few peeks at the Rocky Mountain Front between Lincoln and Augusta. Then she moved down to the Mission Mountains and the Jocko Lakes area.

Passing Arlee, she headed for the northern fringe of the Bitterroot Mountains and then made a deep stab into Idaho along the Interstate 90 corridor.

She moved north of Wallace, Idaho, past Kellogg and nearly to Coeur d�Alene before apparently denning somewhere in the Panhandle. An article in the Kellogg newspaper reported someone seeing her moving 10 miles away from the high school.

Her collar turned off for the winter on Nov. 25, 2013, to conserve battery power. She started sending signals again in April, moving back along I-90 but south this time, past Superior.

The collar�s GPS only logged several locations a day, but it appeared Ethyl punched straight up and over the steep and snowy mountains dividing Fish and Petty creeks.

Reaching the southern fringe of Missoula on May 13, she turned south through the Blue Mountain Recreation Area and made it to Lolo in about three hours. She stayed in the foothills of the Bitterroot Mountains as far south as Florence.

�On May 20, she goes basically right through downtown Lolo and we didn't have any sightings,� Servheen said. �She was minding her own business, walking around trying to figure out where she is.�

Ten days later, she had shot back into Idaho as far as Coeur d�Alene again. Then she turned around, safely crossed over Interstate 90, and headed back for Missoula. She went right past the Republic Services landfill but only sniffed the garbage.

She also cruised some apple orchards in the meadows east of Evaro Hill, as well as some hunters� gut piles in the fall, moving back to sleep in the Rattlesnake Wilderness nearly four miles away every night.

Then she barged up the Bob Marshall again, bypassing her Lake Blaine stomping grounds, headed for Glacier National Park. After some time there, Ethyl moved west toward Eureka. She lost her collar on Oct. 17.

�That�s a total distance of 2,800 miles,� Servheen said. �The only place she didn't go in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem was the Blackfeet Indian Reservation.�
They've got papers at the border for her up here in Canada. The Eco-crazies will welcome her with open arms.
Cool report. Thanks for posting it.
The government is going to have to purchase all that land in order to protect this nomad Grizzly. Just think of all the tortoises & lizards that would benefit.
Originally Posted by mudhen


�On May 20, she goes basically right through downtown Lolo and we didn't have any sightings,� Servheen said. �She was minding her own business, walking around trying to figure out where she is.�


I have a picture in my mind, of a drunk staggering out of a bar late at night. He sees a big "dog", says, "nice doggie" and stumbles home, while a grizz stands there wondering what on earth just happened.

grin

Originally Posted by tex_n_cal

I have a picture in my mind, of a drunk staggering out of a bar late at night. He sees a big "dog", says, "nice doggie" and stumbles home, while a grizz stands there wondering what on earth just happened.

grin


something like this?

[Linked Image]
yeah, except with a bear that's twice as big smile
Looking for love in all the wrong places. Thank God that Lolo drunk wasn't horny. No one likes a drunken halfbreed. Especially a hairy 500 pounder. smile
Heck why not? I to am looking for a beaver on the ice..grin
Originally Posted by las
Looking for love in all the wrong places. Thank God that Lolo drunk wasn't horny. No one likes a drunken halfbreed. Especially a hairy 500 pounder. smile


Call deflave for all your Haidapotamai problems.
Great article... thanks.

Grizzlies are plain awesome and I wouldn't want to live somewhere there were none...
"It adds hope that the big omnivores can coexist with people as their numbers start pushing out of their wilderness core habitat."

Somebody is going to be eaten...
Kinda makes you wonder if she was not able to find a territory of her own, was she being kicked out where she wandered? Lots of Grizzly Bears where she went.
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
"It adds hope that the big omnivores can coexist with people as their numbers start pushing out of their wilderness core habitat."

Somebody is going to be eaten...


50-50 it's a Lib. Considering distributions, population densities of both species I like the odds. I like bears better than most people. They have caused me far fewer problems and provided me with more excitement, some of which I'm in no hurry to repeat. In retro tho, it was fun!
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
"
Somebody is going to be eaten...
A couple of people already have been killed and partially eaten up in the mountains.

At the meeting of the interagency task force earlier this month, a lot of the discussion centered around how to manage grizzlies that have moved onto the plains and are living there year-round. No one in wildlife management has any experience managing what one biologist called "agricultural bears". Regardless of environmental politics, grizz are proving to be pretty adaptable animals. The only real control of expanding populations is going to be killing by humans.
Originally Posted by Brad
Great article... thanks.

Grizzlies are plain awesome and I wouldn't want to live somewhere there were none...


I agree,
grizzlies make a place more wild, more real, makes a fellow realise he isn't the top of the food chain.

When I was younger I was always a little more, shall we say concerned in grizzly country, now though, I am still careful about food storage etc... I am at home in grizzly country, hell I will even hunt with a .243 in griz country. smile

I figure if it's my time, there are much worse way's to go than becoming grizzly poop!
In any given summer there are a half dozen or so brown bears that frequent t my immediate neighborhood on the Kenai peninsula. Seldom a problem unless as stated above someone does something stupid with garbage, uncleaned grills, livestock/feed, hanging meat. I got stories...... smile

Inland Griz are reputed to be more aggressive than coastal bears which have more food resources.
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