Comments
Dr_Marcus_Brody1 t1_iw066gv wrote
I hope so. I dream of this every year. Let the predators live where they’re supposed to, and there will be a drastically smaller list of bad hikers out on trails that leave shit everywhere.
Leather-Mirror-86 t1_iw0ca1k wrote
The presence of bears will not deter carelessness. It will likely result in human-bear conflict, which almost never ends well for bears.
queenweasley t1_iw1gx8n wrote
Right? Let’s murder the animal because it killed a human. Fuck that. Darwinism rules
MinuteMap4622 t1_iw0w40p wrote
That’s smart. Hope to kill the bears before efforts ever start.
Own-Fox9066 t1_iw0km0l wrote
As someone who spends a lot of time outdoors, I don’t know how I feel about this
juiceboxzero t1_iw0llt0 wrote
Isn't part of the point of being outdoors that you're out in nature? Aren't grizzly bears part of that nature?
If we try to domesticate the wild, doesn't that kind of defeat the purpose?
iamlucky13 t1_iw0uetz wrote
Blizzards are part of nature, too, but you don't want to encounter those, either. We don't have control over blizzards, though.
Somewhere in between when you spot the bear and when the bear rips your jaw from your skull, because that's a grizzly's instinctive fighting technique, is where nature probably stops being pleasant. I don't know the exact line, but it's definitely before it switches to tearing open your abdomen to enjoy your liver.
I don't have an absolute opinion on whether grizzlies should be reintroduced to the north Cascades, but I do have a very strong opinion that if we do so, there had better be an overwhelmingly compelling reason to accept the increased risks of having a far more aggressive species of bear in an area where human activity has increased by leaps and bounds over the last century.
juiceboxzero t1_iw0vaai wrote
> Blizzards are part of nature, too, but you don't want to encounter those, either. We don't have control over blizzards, though.
What do you do if you don't want to hike in a blizzard? You don't got hiking when blizzards are likely. Likewise, if you don't want to be attacked by a grizzly, either feel free to not hike in grizzly county, or come prepared to defend yourself.
iamlucky13 t1_iw0wrvy wrote
> Likewise, if you don't want to be attacked by a grizzly, either feel free to not hike in grizzly county
Yes, that's my primary plan. But apparently your plan is to make that more difficult for me by promoting their reintroduction to the places I normally hike.
If you want to convince me it's a good idea, you need a better argument than sentimentality.
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EtherPhreak t1_iw1a0hk wrote
So you work at Dairy Queen too?
mandogvan t1_iw1e8di wrote
I am the blizzard king
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CnD123 t1_iw0la4r wrote
You feel the same way I do. This is a dumb idea that will lead to dead people, dead bears, and has 0 benefit except for the funding to the researchers
Librekrieger t1_ivzxyde wrote
The article says the North Cascades are prime habitat and reintroduction of grizzlies is feasible, while the last process was "discontinued due to overwhelming local opposition". Also that there have been grizzlies sighted there as recently as 2015.
I wonder what the point of expanding the population is? What do grizzlies bring that black bears don't?
[deleted] t1_ivzz65q wrote
> I wonder what the point of expanding the population is? What do grizzlies bring that black bears don't?
Biodiversity. They got after slightly different things in the habitat for food. etc
sleeknub t1_iw0bx0z wrote
Is it really just slightly different? Grizzly bears are a lot bigger.
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sleeknub t1_iw0yvjz wrote
Black bears attack humans on a regular basis, but I don’t think they kill them very often, as opposed to grizzlies (often as a percentage of attacks).
I was asking more about the diet, not about the threat to an individual human in an attack (which is substantially higher for a grizzly), but the two topics are related. My understanding is that grizzlies will attack and kill large game (including humans), which is something black bears don’t do.
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Crazyboreddeveloper t1_iw0ydks wrote
People, for example.
BareLeggedCook t1_iw01lf5 wrote
Because they belong there just as much as we do
A_Drusas t1_iw0idbc wrote
More than we do.
RolosHat t1_iw0moqm wrote
Our earth too
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0l1fz wrote
Couldn't the same thing be said about humans? We have all of everywhere else to hang out in too.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0lv8u wrote
The point is if you're not okay with the risks of being out in the wild, stay home.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0mire wrote
So your argument is basically "I am more important than nature"?
Go to somewhere that isn't part of Grizzly bears' natural habitat if you want to recreate without the fear of getting eaten alive.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0nsui wrote
There what is? The illustration of how stupid your argument is?
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0oj6a wrote
Humans are thriving in tons of other places in North America. This isn't about human lives - it's about human convenience. I don't dispute that your life is more "valuable" than a bear's. I dispute that the fulfillment of your recreational goals is.
malker84 t1_iw0rgf3 wrote
As someone who lives (with two small boys) in the Methow at the doorstep to NCNP. I’m with u/CnD123 on this one.
Have you ever hiked in Glacier NP u/juiceboxzero? I ask because it’s a very different feel than the cascades, “higher consequences” for lack of attention in the backcountry for one. It’s fun to be in that environment but certainly not something I want to deal with on a daily basis. As someone else stated, black bear are docile, they know their place and rarely cause issues. I ran one off our property (it was eating apples off our tree) just a few weeks ago. Griz are different, they know they’re the top of the food chain. There’s almost certain to be human griz conflict. Guess who’s on the hook when that happens? The federal assassins who’s job it is to hunt and kill any bear that becomes too comfortable around humans (ie. thinks they’re top of the food chain).
I get the sense you are ok with this because you won’t be affected by it. I assume you would feel different if you had experience hiking around griz AND were faced with them reintroduced in your back yard for no functional reason other than “they used to be here many decades ago and it would be nice”. Where does that logic end? There’s no way to change all the ills humans have brought upon this earth by reintroducing griz to NCNP. Unfortunately..
juiceboxzero t1_iw0ux52 wrote
If you're unwilling to accept the consequences of the natural environment you live in, you should consider living elsewhere.
malker84 t1_iw0ypbi wrote
Lol. The response I would expect from a person who has so little to add. No response to any of the questions I posed or points I made, simply latched onto the first sound bite that came to mind.
Your comment makes no sense. I moved here BEFORE the griz. I’m willing to accept many consequences of life out here. I take issue with resources being used to artificially implant wild animals (of the aggressive apex predator type) in a area just because they “once roamed there”.
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BareLeggedCook t1_iw0nqzq wrote
It’s insane to take the nature out of nature lol.
Only want to experience it if it’s 100% safe?
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BareLeggedCook t1_iw0vhtk wrote
You should stay in the city
CnD123 t1_iw0wpdz wrote
You should stay in an area that grizzly lives. So, not here.
_Miskey_ t1_iw160ps wrote
How is N Cascades not a remote place away from population centers?
CnD123 t1_iw18pr8 wrote
Its 2 hours from Seattle
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1chemistdown t1_iw062lo wrote
> What do grizzlies bring that black bears don’t?
Pepper spray scented bear skat.
DeadEyeDoubter t1_iw0i01j wrote
Will be interesting to see how this pans out.
Selfishly, I do feel more comfortable in the backcountry when I know grizzlies aren't in the area, but it's also kinda a shame that grizzlies only exist in small pockets in the continental US across WY, ID, MT and a shred of WA. Healthy prevalence of species does trump my comfort level of course though.
As far as scary mammals in North America the top two of my ranked list:
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Grizzly bears
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Moose
Black bears and then cougars are probably next but both of those are so far down in scariness compared to the top two they barely even register.
A_Drusas t1_iw0ipyd wrote
Moose are far more dangerous than grizzlies. Anyone who's spent time living in Alaska knows this very well.
wpnw t1_iw0z8o4 wrote
Whoever downvoted you clearly has no idea what they're talking about. This is abjectly true. Moose will absolutely fuck you up if you get too up in their business.
DeadEyeDoubter t1_iw11f6p wrote
I agree completely. I just have been around grizzly bears less so feel more on edge around them even if totally irrational in comparison to moose.
MiddleCentipede t1_ivzybnf wrote
We should have dinosaurs in the Hanford area.
plugnpl4y t1_iw01dma wrote
We have plenty of dinosaurs working at Hanford!
RysloVerik t1_iw160ac wrote
Holy chicken little, Batman. So many here make Glacier and Yellowstone out to be grizzly murder parks were everyone dies.
Glacier has 150x the visitors as North Cascades and there have only been 10 bear attacks in the last 30 years.
H2Bro_69 t1_iw00reo wrote
Alright we’re going to need mandatory “how to act around bear” courses for all hikers, because grizzlies are potentially way more aggressive than black bears as far as I know. We need to make sure poor bears aren’t getting shot because of stupid people. I worry a bit about potential conflicts at popular areas such as Ross Lake.
I would like to see this work though, because it’s definitely ecologically important.
Edit: maybe not mandatory course, but just much more awareness.
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teabagalomaniac t1_iw0of3y wrote
I'm curious about the "ecologically important" part. What specifically do you mean by that.
queenweasley t1_iw1h9on wrote
Poor bears already get shot by stupid people, that’s why they are all gone 😔
CnD123 t1_iw0kzya wrote
No one can explain how it is ecologically important. How are the Cascades being negatively impacted by no grizzlies? California? There isnt a negative impact.
insultingname t1_iw0rsia wrote
That's what anti-wolf people said about reintroducing wolves to Yellowstone. Then they put them back and saw massive improvements to the entire ecology of park. You can't see a 'negative impact' because you're operating from the assumption that no grizzlies represents 'normal.' That is a false baseline.
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insultingname t1_iw0um4j wrote
- Gray wolves are an apex species that occupy a top niche in the natural food chain. Like bears and cougars, they have few competitors and play a prominent role in any ecosystem they inhabit. So yes, wolves are absolutely apex predators. 2) No one is suggesting dropping a bunch of grizzlies off in the suburbs. Peddle your strawman bullshit elsewhere. 3) I lived in rural western Montana for a while, I DID have grizzlies in my neighborhood, and it was fucking awesome.
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insultingname t1_iw0vojd wrote
I'm from here originally, and I'm going to take the Department of Wildlife's opinion on whether or not they are apex predators over yours. If you're too much of a coward to handle the presence of wildlife in wilderness areas then stay the fuck out of the mountains.
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insultingname t1_iw11cqy wrote
>The Department of Wildlife gets more funding as a result of this.
First of all, good. Second, does that mean they don't know the definition of an Apex predator? What's your point? You realized that you were just wrong about the definition of 'apex predator' so you decided to pivot to yet another straw man?
>No one is complaining about wolf reintroduction other than farmers.
That's not remotely true. It was largely hunters. PS - when they raise livestock instead of crops they're called ranchers not farmers, dumbass. PPS - the only major group complaining about BEAR reintroduction is (spoiler alert) The National Cattlemen's Beef Association. AKA Ranchers!
>The public does not want this to happen, and it wont. It was already struck down once.
It wasn't 'struck down' and it had nothing to do with public opinion. In mid-2017, officials from the U.S. Department of the Interior, without clear explanation, halted progress on the recovery efforts. The process kicked back into gear in 2019, but that effort was again squelched by Interior, under the Trump administration, in 2020.
>Hopefully you dont ever startle a grizzly. Because it wont go well for you.
I already have, but I carry bear spray in grizzly territory and am not an idiot, so, as is the case in the vast vast VAST majority of bear encounters, I am fine. However, it's very obvious that you have exactly zero understanding of not just this issue, but of bears in general. You're just some cretin who thinks the big bad bears are out to get you, and you're either too lazy or too stupid to educate yourself about how to be safe in bear country. I'm done with you.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0lpkv wrote
3. People who think the desire for outdoor recreation doesn't mean we should sanitize the wild and domesticate it to our liking.
CnD123 t1_iw0m4ry wrote
Grizzlies were driven out of the Western US for a reason. Putting them too close major population centers is a horrible idea. They have tons of territory in the Rockies, Canada, and Alaska in more remote places
juiceboxzero t1_iw0mda9 wrote
The horrible idea would be putting major population centers too close to native grizzly habitat. We have tons of territory in other places too.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0mqzr wrote
Or accept the risks of where you choose to live.
Otherwise, you are, in fact, espousing the belief that you are right to reshape nature as you see fit, to serve your own ends.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0n8fv wrote
The classic "we do this already, so we can and should do it MORE" argument.
CnD123 t1_iw0neox wrote
The classic "revert nature to what it was before modern society" pipe dream
juiceboxzero t1_iw0nq68 wrote
I'm not actually suggesting that. I'm suggesting you should accept the risks inherent to the choices you make. I have no problem with someone wanting to build a cabin in the woods, for instance. I also have no sympathy for them when it burns down in a forest fire.
I'm saying nature has a right to exist, and if you want to force/keep a species out of an area, you need a better reason than "I want my recreational activities to be less risky."
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0o8pc wrote
Yep, you getting to have recreation wherever you want, with a risk level you're willing to tolerate is more important than other species getting to simply live in their natural habitat.
You: "I love the Washington wilderness, but fuck nature - it should be less wild"
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0ouss wrote
You're defending the choices of the past while pretending not to espouse the beliefs that justified them. LOL.
That's kind of like saying "I'm not racist, but the people of this area thought it was in our best interest to restrict the rights of black people. I'm just a fan of the status quo".
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Leather-Mirror-86 t1_iw0w6yu wrote
I guarantee that I spend more time in the woods than you do, and I am absolutely in favor of grizzlies on the landscape. Just admit that you're a fuckin wussy who is scared of encountering a bear. 🤣
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Leather-Mirror-86 t1_iw0wnyn wrote
Literally everything you've written is a dumb comment. You're a pathetic, scared, troll with a poor understanding of ecology and too much time on his hands. Chickenshit NIMBYism from a fake outdoorsman at its finest.
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Leather-Mirror-86 t1_iw0z7lh wrote
You don't even know the name of the government agency that you're claiming is one of the only groups with a reason for wanting grizzlies in Washington. You make the claim that it's because of the funding it will bring. Do you realize that biologists don't get cut a personal check for the work they perform? Your entire shtick is bad faith and straw man arguments and glossing over important details because you don't actually understand anything about what you're trying to say, and you think that you can use "common sense" to prove some kind of a point. Real working professionals laugh at nitwits like you because we can see the shit coming out of your nose and ears.
Here's a bread crumb. Spend some time reading about whitebark pines, Clark's nutcrackers, and grizzlies. Or just keep posting stupid crap, whatever.
queenweasley t1_iw1h4df wrote
Right, because if we don’t hike/camp/hunt then we have no right to an opinion about reintroducing native wildlife? Frig off
beef-medallions t1_ivzpw1n wrote
What could go wrong?
acre18 t1_ivzze1g wrote
A species native to the area could remain displaced, imparting numerous observed and unobserved ecological consequences?
Is that the answer you were looking for?
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acre18 t1_iw0l01k wrote
I don’t know what to tell you if you think the unprecedented global loss of biodiversity isn’t serious or at the very least alarming you’re lost.
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acre18 t1_iw0lqcp wrote
Classic NIMBY lol if nothing else at least Washingtonians are consistent
CnD123 t1_iw0lzga wrote
LOL. Sorry I enjoy backpacking and dont want to worry about getting eaten alive, because a bear is feeding on a dead elk near the trail and views me as a threat.
Lets put the fucking grizzlies in your back yard?
selkirk74 t1_iw0oa5o wrote
More people go to Yellowstone and Glacier than the north cascades and not many people are getting killed by bears.
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backflips_everyday t1_iw0szhq wrote
Lol did you really just try to make a NIMBY argument about bear that EAT people? That’s a really bad analogy, do you realize you just compared grizzly bears to minorities and poor people?
acre18 t1_iw0tc9y wrote
Surely this is a joke
backflips_everyday t1_iw0u5ge wrote
Do you live in one of these areas where grizzlies would be introduced?
[deleted] t1_ivzz0aq wrote
not the bears fault if someone is a moron
Nothing_WithATwist t1_iw0b9sn wrote
I’ve heard wild animals sometimes attack non-morons as well.
CnD123 t1_iw0kj6y wrote
Not redditors who never actually go outside. The same ones who think this actually makes sense.
juiceboxzero t1_iw0ld89 wrote
Wild animals tend not to attack people who aren't in the wild.
Not that I'm saying you shouldn't go out into the wild - just that your desire to be in the wild doesn't give you the right to domesticate it.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0m750 wrote
And yet here you are suggesting that we shouldn't repatriate a species that we (basically) removed from the area because it would make it more dangerous for us, as if WE are the purpose of nature.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0mmmm wrote
I know you think that's clever and all, but velociraptors don't actually exist.
CnD123 t1_iw0n4l7 wrote
Just like grizzlies in WA state. Move to rural BC and have a field day
juiceboxzero t1_iw0nbga wrote
If you want to do stuff outside, move to Texas and have a field day.
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juiceboxzero t1_iw0ny9q wrote
I'm literally just parroting your argument back to you, in the hopes that you realize how stupid it is.
Your argument is really "humans are the superior species and therefore we have the right to do whatever we want to all other species, so fuck 'em" and I just wish you'd own that.
CnD123 t1_iw0oa0d wrote
That is not my argument. My argument is that we decided years ago that is in our region's best interest to not have grizzlies.
Sorry, your side lost.
juiceboxzero t1_iw0opa5 wrote
>My argument is that we decided years ago that is in our region's best interest to not have grizzlies.
That's the same argument.
SpunkyRadcat t1_iw0pmma wrote
There's a difference between reintroducing an animal native to an area who only lost that area due to human interference, and an animal that went extinct due to natural selection.
Also velociraptors weren't native to our region anyway. They were Asian, and Jurassic Park lied to you. If you want to read more about dinosaurs in WA here's a link.
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SpunkyRadcat t1_iw0yw5n wrote
You know Grizzly bears are in Yellowstone which is one of the biggest tourist locations in the US. And yet when looking it up, they result in only about one injury every 5 years. According to this the chances of being attacked by a Grizzly bear in Yellowstone is 1 in 2.7 million.
I know you're gonna say, "Well this is somewhere else! Not here in WA!" but if we're gonna make decisions we need to look at similar situations. And the data shows they're not as big a threat as y'all are making them out to be.
Be respectful, be aware of your surroundings, and you'll be fine. Nature isn't some human exclusive playground where anything potentially dangerous to us needs to die.
[deleted] t1_iw19vql wrote
Usually non-morons are prepared and have bear spray in bear country, etc
Dr_Marcus_Brody1 t1_iw06dhd wrote
More idiots get killed, therefore leaving more natural land for the wildlife that call it home. I love it.
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DaneCz123 t1_ivzlvus wrote
Great to see this! I believe theirs 50 in the state, some are in the north cascades already and I believe some are in the Far East of the state. Stuff like this gives me hope for the west which I deeply treasure. A big problem is that there’s way too many people in the mountains from the cities so I would definitely expect some conflict. Wouldn’t be suprised if they made their way down south in the next 10 to 15 years. Or they could head east. But again, makes me very happy to see them in the state again. North Cascades is the best habitat for them.
SilkyWaves t1_ivzmzz5 wrote
Personally not looking forward to this. I enjoy only watching my back for cougars. Don’t want to also be looking out for grizzlies.
amaninseattle t1_iw01taz wrote
Lucky for you grizzly ain't gonna stalk you like a big cat.
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[deleted] t1_ivzz2w0 wrote
grizzlies don't really go out and ambush people. you just gotta not startle one.
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DeadEyeDoubter t1_iw0gmc4 wrote
The bell thing isn't true.
Black bears will mostly leave you alone. And grizzly bears as a whole will as well. But grizzly bears are definitely more territorial than black bears.
iamlucky13 t1_iw0w557 wrote
> Bears aren’t interested in attacking you.
They aren't usually interested in hunting people, but it does happen from time-to-time.
Once they've established a home range, however, they can be very interested in defending their territory, especially during mating season. Having read a variety of stories about bears attacks as part of trying to be an aware hiker, they always make me relieved we only have black bears in our area.
Reading a book on the Lewis and Clark expedition in particular made an impression on me. When the natives were telling them stories about grizzlies, they could couldn't wait to encounter one to show off how much braver and better hunters they were.
Actually encountering grizzlies cured the party of that enthusiasm, and Lewis actually almost died in one of the encounters.
https://lewis-clark.org/sciences/mammals/bears/grizzly-bear-encounters/
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DaneCz123 t1_ivzoqcj wrote
As a hunter it will be interesting to see how everyone else reacts. I expect the state to take the identification tests even more seriously now
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DeadEyeDoubter t1_iw0fpnh wrote
Grizzlies are far more dangerous than mountain lions. Mountain lions spread across the entire US and average far fewer attacks on humans annually than grizzly bears despite grizzly bears occupying only a super small area of land across a few states.
CnD123 t1_iw0kera wrote
This thread is full of some of the most ignorant people imaginable. Thanks for trying to educate them
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DeadEyeDoubter t1_iw10ygr wrote
What? It's absolutely a good metric. There are literally more grizzly bear attacks than cougar attacks despite cougars existing in almost every state and humans being around them way more than grizzlies.
Gauging danger of an animal based on social media videos you've seen is a way worse metric.
BarnabyWoods t1_iw0jqbz wrote
>some are in the north cascades already
Last one was seen in 1996. There's been a lot of monitoring since then in NCNP, with no confirmed sightings, hair, tracks, or scat, so I don't think so.
queenweasley t1_iw1gv68 wrote
Ahh is this why there was a push to ban bear hunting?? Personally I’m not a supporter of predator hunting. Deer sure cause the population needs to culled to protect the ecosystem.
ckopfster t1_iw0jkzm wrote
I was and am a big proponent of the wolf reintroduction but I’m not so sure about running around with Griz.
Sasquatchlovestacos t1_iw0pfvw wrote
Saw a grizz there last year
Edit: who downvoted this? Lol. It was right on the road near Diablo Lake. Loads of cars stopped.
Broodwiches t1_iw13lpf wrote
Did any of them / you have a camera? Grizzly bears have been photographed once or twice in the last twenty years in Washington. This would be a big deal. You sure it wasn’t a big brown black bear?
Sasquatchlovestacos t1_iw170p2 wrote
Yeah I’ve got a really shitty phone photo I’ll try and upload
Broodwiches t1_iw1a6ge wrote
Let me know, or send me a dm!
Accurate_Humor948 t1_iw1hhv7 wrote
Idk I was stalked by a bobcat a couple weeks ago and that was scary as f. It did run off when I yelled at it so there’s that. Don’t think you can say the same for a grizz
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azdood85 t1_iw0l5p3 wrote
Good thing they are limiting us to 10rd mags. Hope thats enough to take down a grizzly with your favorite firearm.
GRB-221009A t1_iw0uny6 wrote
This wouldn't be r/Washington if someone in the comments didn't find a way to complain about state restrictions on magazine capacities.
azdood85 t1_iw10z31 wrote
Doesnt feel like a democracy when politicians get to choose gun and abortion rights.
bucko787 t1_iw0tnr5 wrote
As a result of the WDFW’s inability to manage the predators that already reside in this state, I am fundamentally opposed to putting any attempts to restore grizzly populations in our state.
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EverestMaher t1_iw0z0dq wrote
At this point being the dinosaurs and dodos back. Same logic
Orplem t1_iw0lsp1 wrote
I hope that if they do re-introduce grizzly bears to Washington state that they let them loose in the capital building. But seriously guys, the first hiker to be ate needs to result in good men of the back country exterminating all grizzly bears in Washington state. I use the term “exterminate” precisely.
The only people that want this are the starry eyed useful idiot environmentalist that are controlled by the Malthusian globalist overlords, the globalist overlords who control them, and the nature worshipers that hate human beings. What I mean by this are the people who pray to the spirits of the forest for it to heal yet wish suffering on their neighbors over a disagreement or a fight. These are the people that would splash acid in the face of a child for the revolution.
DumbCoyotePup t1_iw0s14r wrote
Did you reach your dog whistle quota
[deleted] t1_iw0s5tn wrote
[removed]
roachman253 t1_ivzoxyw wrote
So now I have to worry about brown bears on my hikes
c_t_lee t1_ivzx467 wrote
The bears are like “great now we have to deal with /u/roachman253 on our hikes”
CnD123 t1_iw0kmmi wrote
The bears have most of North America to wander around up in Canada.
roachman253 t1_iw0ldam wrote
Ok
wheezl t1_ivzsodc wrote
Hopefully this will help parking on the trailheads.