Come out to Florence Petersen Park this Wednesday night to experience a slideshow and presentation by local bear expert Michael Allen about one of his favourite Whistler bears, Slumber.
Photograph by Michael Allen
The event starts at 9pm, and is free to attend. Be sure to bring a chair/blanket to sit on, and enjoy this journey into the world of Slumber.
One of the great joys of a Whistler summer is the chance to see one of our valley’s dozens of resident black bears. Still, they remain widely misunderstood by visitors and locals alike. Thus, in the name of black bear education, with a healthy dose of celebration as well, August is officially Bear Month at the Whistler Museum.
Quite possibly the cutest photo in our archives, or anywhere else for that matter. Best buds Molly & McGee share a laugh at Parkhurst Logging Village, circa 1937.
We kicked things off with our 17th annual LEGO-building Competition last weekend, where 50 kids built some awesome LEGO creations along the theme, “What if you were a Whistler bear?” We saw everything from cozy bear dens, to high-tech airplanes to assist bear conservationists of the future, and lots more.
For the upcoming 3 Saturdays we will be bringing even more bear events with our Family Bear Days featuring renowned local bear researcher Michael Allen. Each day will feature a special presentation by Michael Allen on a different bear-related topic, followed by a family friendly bear craft. Everyone is welcome and all the activities are included with a regular admission to the museum.
Tomorrow, the series starts off with the presentation “Behaviour of Whistler black bears,” providing a solid overview of the other “local population” and the particular adaptations they have made to Whistler. Afterwards, you can make your own bear mask and practice your bear-y behaviour!
On August 24th, Michael Allen presents “10 mothers, 20 years: a look at the changing bear family.” Following the talk we will make families of bear puppets using pine cones, and other materials! Finally, on August 31st we conclude with “Nocturnal fishing bears of the Squamish River.” Sneaky stuff. For this week’s craft, everyone will get to create their own bear stamps!
The Whistler Museum and Archives Society looks forward to a summer full of family fun! We would like to welcome the Whistler Sailing Association, Isobel MacLaurin, and Michael Allen to the Whistler Museuma s they guide our activities and share with us their knowledge of all aspects of Whistler’s culture and history.
Every craft activity is a great addition to your visit to the Whistler Museum, perfectly complementing our exhibits. Fun and interactive activities will have your child curious and eager to learn more. Activity included with admission.
Everyone knows that Whistler is bear country. Today, several dozen black bears live within the ski area alone. While it has been at times a rocky relationship, Whistlerites are rightfully proud of our relatively successful co-existence with local bears. (For a number of reasons, this has been an especially stressful year for our ursine friends, as you can read up on here and here.)
For the most part, our local bear population has adapted well to the expanding human presence in Whistler. Michael Allen photo.
Justified as it may be, celebrating our thriving black bear population obscures one crucial fact: Whistler is also grizzly bear country, or, at least, it very recently was. Earlier in the twentieth century it was not uncommon to see these tawny giants on the slopes surrounding Whistler, and they often wandered into the valley itself as was reported by local trapper Billy Bailiff in a 1935 provincial wildlife survey by the Royal BC Museum.
Grizzlies were most commonly encountered in the gently rolling country to the southeast of Whistler Mountain familiar to backcountry skiers and hikers as the Musical Bumps and Singing Pass. The wide expanse of open meadows and sub-alpine parkland provides a diversity of niche environmental conditions perfect for supporting an array of wildlife, big and small.
Hunters with two grizzly bears in the Singing Pass/Musical Bumps area, circa 1916-17.
The local grizzly population suffered a steady decline through the twentieth century, though the odd grizzly still does occasionally wander into developed areas in Sea-to-Sky Country, usually pressured by abnormal environmental conditions. (Click here to read about a grizzly encounter in Squamish in 2007.) While the reasons for their virtual disappearance are not simple, unsurprisingly, they are largely man-made. As local naturalist Bob Brett puts it:
The “line of extinction” as it’s sometimes called has moved, save for a couple of pockets, from Mexico north to the Pemberton Valley. Wolves, wolverines, and grizzlies are all animals that don’t do well around people, probably for the same reasons: huge home ranges, a tendency to get shot when near people, and general aversion to humans.
Sure, living with bears has its challenges but we all recognize that it is more than worth it, which raises the obvious question: could grizzlies one day reclaim some of their lost territory? Perhaps more crucially, if it was possible, would we let them?
While this most recent grizzly encounter near Squamish ended peacefully, there is still a long way to go before they are once again recognized as rightful residents alongside black bears. Of course, grizzlies are a completely different beast from their darker-haired cousins. For one, they’re bigger, hungrier, and require far larger swaths of undisturbed wild country to sustain themselves. They also require a rather different approach to conservation and management.
In 1989 a stray grizzly wandered into Function Junction where it was shot and killed by RCMP officers after it started displaying aggressive behavior towards local dogs. A June 15th 1989 article in the Squamish Citizen about the encounter reported an RCMP representative’s statement that the bear was fatally shot because local authorities did not have the necessary expertise or equipment to safely tranquilize and relocate the animal. The same article also reported on the successful relocation of a black bear that same evening by provincial wildlife officials from the Creekside area.
While it is easy to get disheartened, even cynical, when considering modern society’s seemingly unrelenting assault on the natural world, attitudes are changing (if slowly and unevenly). Plus, as this article shows, nature can be incredibly resilient.
So what’s your take on all this? Should we encourage grizzlies to return to the surrounding hills which they called home for thousands of years, or are they simply too dangerous to co-exist with us humans (despite contrary evidence in Northern BC, the Rockies and Alaska)? Have we modified the local environment too much to enable such a homecoming? Certainly these are questions that we, as a community, should be asking.
For an eloquent take on the dwindling fate of southwestern BC’s grizzlies, and human-wildlife interaction in general, see the beautifully filmed episode of The Nature of Things “The Last Grizzly of Paradise Valley.” (shot in the North Cascades near Princeton, not the Paradise Valley north of Squamish).