The wife’s been showing these to me the last couple of weeks. It’s frigging hilarious that he just walks in usually grabbing a mouthful and leaving. He must have the munchies after a dinner of trash.
Swing again. Hint, it's a black bear, aka Ursus americanus.
Even if that's true, the difference between a brown bear and a grizzly is diet due to location.
The point is, you titled the thread “grizzly”, and it is not one. This despite the erroneous utoob title. And, despite a population’s diet.
This is a hunting site, and being able to tell one from the other is important. Important enough, that in some areas one had to pass an ID test to hunt them.
Big blonde one stood up form the yellow grass once, woofed a couple times, junior ran up a tree, and I went back to the truck and let her have that creek for the day.
What I really want is a nice mahogany colored one, like the one I saw in a creek on timber lands in NorCal.
If I could find one with purple and red streaks on it, I'd know it came down from Potlandia or up from La La Land.
Big blonde one stood up form the yellow grass once, woofed a couple times, junior ran up a tree, and I went back to the truck and let her have that creek for the day.
What I really want is a nice mahogany colored one, like the one I saw in a creek on timber lands in NorCal.
If I could find one with purple and red streaks on it, I'd know it came down from Potlandia or up from La La Land.
Big blonde one stood up form the yellow grass once, woofed a couple times, junior ran up a tree, and I went back to the truck and let her have that creek for the day.
What I really want is a nice mahogany colored one, like the one I saw in a creek on timber lands in NorCal.
If I could find one with purple and red streaks on it, I'd know it came down from Potlandia or up from La La Land.
Big blonde one stood up form the yellow grass once, woofed a couple times, junior ran up a tree, and I went back to the truck and let her have that creek for the day.
What I really want is a nice mahogany colored one, like the one I saw in a creek on timber lands in NorCal.
If I could find one with purple and red streaks on it, I'd know it came down from Potlandia or up from La La Land.
Big blonde one stood up form the yellow grass once, woofed a couple times, junior ran up a tree, and I went back to the truck and let her have that creek for the day.
What I really want is a nice mahogany colored one, like the one I saw in a creek on timber lands in NorCal.
If I could find one with purple and red streaks on it, I'd know it came down from Potlandia or up from La La Land.
A large bear shocked a 7-Eleven employee by repeatedly entering a California convenience store to snack on candy bars.
On September 6, cashier Christopher Kinson, 54, was working the night shift at a 7-Eleven in Olympic Valley, California, when he saw the store's door open — but no one entered.
According to SWNS, he looked down to the bottom of the open door and found a brown bear chewing on a selection of late-night snacks.
"Initially, I was surprised. I see the door open, and I don't see a torso, and I am like, 'oh my god. It's a bear," Kinson told SWNS, adding that "the bear was about 20% to 30% bigger in real life" compared to photos.