
Tag: bears
I Like Bears, Part III: I Go to Bear World

Recently, we had Mother’s Day here in America. My beloved children are now getting big enough that they can take the initiative to do things for me. Thirteen heard on the radio that Bear World was letting moms in free, so he decided we should go. Here he is with the bear, face blurred for privacy. My son is the blonde one and the bear is the dark-haired one.

“Yellowstone” Bear World, despite its name, is not at or in Yellowstone Park but actually closer to Rexburg, Idaho, where you can see the foothills of the Grand Tetons but not the Tetons themselves. The day we went was beautiful and sunny:

The way it works is that you first drive through an animal park, and then you access the parking lot and other attractions. You can drive back through the animal park as many times as you like on one ticket. But there is a very stern warning:

The first part of the park has various ungulates like this rare albino elk:

and this regular elk:

… and also bison.
Then you go through a gate where an employee checks your receipt and reiterates the instructions. Beyond the gate, you are in the bear part of bear world, where you can see multiple bears just hanging out. There are, at least in the black bear area, far more bears than you would normally see all in one place. The trees all have metal cuffs on them, I guess to prevent them from being destroyed by all those bears.

There are feeding troughs for the bears,

and shady places for them to sleep. Many of them were doing just that.

But before you get to where the black bears are, you pass an enclosure with a few grizzly bears. The grizzlies are behind an electric fence.

This is gal is pacing the perimeter.

Notice that she has the distinctive grizzly look: the concave or “dished” face, and the grizzly shoulder hump. They are also a lot larger than black bears.
I say “she.” We assumed all the bears in the park were females, because it’s hard to imagine you could keep one or more males in these conditions without them fighting each other.

Back to the black bear area. The black bears were free to roam across the road if they liked, even right in front of your car. Notice the black bear silhouette: straight muzzle, no hump, smaller. I love the curving feet!

At one point, we even saw some employees standing among the black bears! They were photographing a large tree whose trunk had been torn up. The bears seemed unconcerned.

And now we get to my favorite thing! You see, “black” bears (and actually grizzlies as well!) can be any color. (I am learning so much from Bear World!) They can be blond, for example. We did see one that was black-and-blond patches. But this here … is a cinnamon bear! It’s hard to tell from the picture, but its brown coat was almost ginger. The hair also looked thicker and more luscious than on some of the other bears, almost as if it had been groomed.
Also … and I bet you didn’t see this coming … Bear World also has DINOSAURS!

One of them went so far as to eat Mr. Mugrage.

Thirteen, meanwhile, snuck into a dino’s nest and hatched out of its egg:

I have seen better dinosaur parks, but I have never seen more bears.
Bears! The Blondes Have More Fun Edition

The following article appeared in my local hometown newspaper a few weeks ago. It has everything you could possibly want in a bear story:
Recently a local family had the experience of finding a bear in the woods. Those woods happened to be on the [redacted] property four miles north of [town name]. Apparently she sniffed out the bee hives near the [family name] place and found herself in the trees.
After observing the trails cams, [the family] found her among the trees sitting on the ground and called Fish and Game to come take her to a safe place so she would not be killed. The Fish and Game were able to dart her as she was sitting on the ground. She apparently was not aggressive and seemed content where she was.
They said according to the biologist she was an older black bear by the wear on her teeth. They thought at first she may have been a grizzly cub because of her unusual blond coloring … The biologist was also excited about the coloring of her fur because it was so blonde, being a black bear.
The Fish and Game have no idea where she may have come from, but speculated over by Sun Valley, and it is not uncommon to have bears on the desert when the water becomes scarce in the mountains.
The bear was tranquilized and put in a transport cage and taken away, but not before everyone involved had a photo-op with the “sleeping bear.” The bear was transported to the Bear Lake area.
Our hometown paper, vol. 27
Really, I can’t add anything to this. The last line says it all.

Guilty Pleasure: Stoneware


I got this fantastic mug at university. I bought it from a sale the Art Dept students were having. Back then, buying anything at all was a big decision that I had to justify. When my Japanese roommate saw it, she got all excited and said the mug looked Japanese. I probably should have given it to her (sorry, Makiko!), but I didn’t. I am still treasuring it all these years later.

Faithful OOB readers have seen this mug before, in my “I Like Bears” post. I think my husband got it for me during a trip to Yellowstone years ago, then it spent several years in storage, then I re-discovered it, with new appreciation, after our most recent move. I use it now because my book The Strange Land features a Bear of Justice.

This lovely thing was purchased at the Fantasy Faire, from a stonewear booth (advertising slogan: “Get Stoned”). I asked the potter, an older lady, about her process, and she said, “I take some clay. I throw it on the wheel. I make a cup. I glaze it, and then I fire it.”
Do you like stonewear?
This 13-Year-Old Female Brown Bear Is So Relatable
I mean, to all the other ladies of a certain age out there, don’t you ever wake up feeling “highly predatory”? Or like you just need to eat 38 reindeer calves? I know I do.
Two Book Signing Events

The Strange Land came out this spring. It features bears, and a people group hunting and gathering their way to the chilly Land Bridge. Hence this marble bear lying on some fur.
Now, you can get The Strange Land signed — or buy a copy from me personally — if you can make it to Utah on the second weekend in December.
I will be having a book sale/signing at Eborn Books in the New Gate Mall in Odgen on Friday, Dec. 10. (I’ll be selling copies of The Long Guest, too.) The address is:
Eborn Books – New Gate Mall Ogden
3651 Wall Avenue
Ogden, Utah 84405
time: early to late afternoon (starting about 1 p.m.? Maybe? Details still being hammered out)
and the location looks something like this:

Besides my books, they have a wonderful selection of used sci-fi and fantasy; and, as you can see, children’s books.
On Saturday, Dec. 11, 2021, I’ll have a signing/sale at another Eborn books location:
Eborn Books – Layton Hills Mall
1201 N Hill Field Rd
Level 1, #1052 (Next to JC Penny)
Layton, UT 84041
time: morning, so I can get back home that evening

If you live anywhere nearby – or find yourself traveling to Utah for some Christmastime skiing or anything like that – bring your friends! I’d love to see you!

Here are the books I’ll be bringing to sell! I’m so excited! Especially since prices are going to go up starting November 5.
Another Scary Bear Ordeal
“A Grizzly Bear Terrorized a Man for Days in Alaska. The Coast Guard Saw His SOS“
I mean, this could really be made into a horror movie.
Edit: sorry, the link is now not working. It just takes you to Yahoo news. But I promise you, it was a scary story.
The Best Bear Video Ever
You know I like bear videos. Love-hate, that is. But this one is perfect. Cute, hilarious, almost not scary. Because what’s being mauled isn’t a person, it’s a GoPro. And … it’s recording.