The bear everyone’s been talking about here in the Macks Inn area was put down this last week. It turns out the bear had been a problem bear in the Big Hole region of Montana and was relocated to the northern Centennial mountains. From there he discovered Island Park and resumed his human-food-filching habits.
Local rangers spent considerable time and effort urging people in the area to “bear proof” their homes and campsites, but to no avail. Garbage was readily available in the area (even after all the warnings,) and the bear became more and more brazen in his “raids” on human food.
Last week, wildlife officials agreed there was no rehabilitating the bear, and relocating him would likely just shift the safety burden to someone else, and the decision was made to put the bear down.
Sadly, this was an avoidable situation. Had residents and visitors been more diligent in cleaning their cabin and campsite areas, the bear would have had no choice but to find food elsewhere. Since that didn’t happen, the bear was killed. Hopefully this is a wakeup call to everyone. If you like the wildlife here in the area, you can make a difference in seeing that exists like it is now for many years to come. All we need to do is be vigilant in not providing food for wild animals. That seems to me a small price to pay.
In an effort to help you find some of the places of beauty here in Island Park, we continue our Makin’ The Loop series. This week’s loop has spectacular views and somewhat less dirt road than last week’s installment.
The Ashton, Idaho-based Smart Growth Coalition will be holding four forums beginning tomorrow night (August 27) on how to balance growth in Fremont county with the habitat needs of wildlife. The meetings will be held in the SGC’s headquarters at 512 main street in Ashton. From 6:30 to 7:00 p.m., light refreshments will be served and you will have an opportunity to mingle with the experts in this field.
Something happened Friday afternoon in Island Park that almost defies description. About 3:00 p.m. on a very hot and humid (for Island Park) afternoon a bear stepped out of the forest and into the river for a drink and to cool off. This all occurred about 75 yards upstream from The Landing Restaurant at Macks Inn. By some accounts the bear was a big black bear. By other accounts it was a grizz. But that’s not important.
I read with interest (and some frustration) the article in the Island Park News about the plight of the grizzly bear in America. It seems that they haven’t been introduced and / or haven’t flourished over the years. They don’t do well around people or civilization, and they apparently need some good, old-fashioned, peace and quiet (like me on a Saturday morning.)
Somewhere inside me is a frustrated explorer. I have an insatiable need to know what’s around the next bend in the river. It’s not enough to know where it comes out. I want to see it for myself. It’s been that way since moving to Island Park a few years ago. I have been on a quest. I want to drive every road, explore every trail, fish every hole, stand on every mountain top. And not only that, I want to do it both winter and summer.
The Mesa Falls marathon will begin this Saturday first thing in the morning, and if you want to participate, you need to register by Thursday. You can do the marathon (which is from Mesa Falls to Ashton,) a half marathon, a 5k, or a one mile family run. Or, if you’re like me, you can run ahead, snap a few photos and run back to the car.
The economic hard times our country is facing haven’t spared Island Park. Fall River Electric Coop has seen a decrease in revenues as well. For example, this year Fall River has only connected 75 new homes. Contrast that with the 472 they did in 2007 and you can see the magnitude of the problem. For that reason, the coop has started with their first round of layoffs.
If you’re tired of the rat-race in Yellowstone, you’re water-logged from too much water skiing and encrusted with three inches of dust from being number 6 in a flight of six ATV’s, I have something you might really enjoy — a day trip to Virginia City, Montana.
I live just through the trees from a really grumpy guy. I’ve been told he’s even grumpier than I am (no, seriously.) The thing he hates most in this life is unsupervised kids on four wheelers and motorcycles blasting past his house at mach four raising an outrageous cloud of dust.
Well, ’tis the season. The road construction season, that is. Road repair crews are popping up all over Island Park and there is serious expansion of the road (new passing lanes, etc.) in several locations.
Our oh so liberal friends in the Department of the Interior in their infinite (but twisted) wisdom have decided to lower the cap on the number of snowmobiles allowed each day in Yellowstone National Park to 318 sleds. Note that’s not 315 or 320. It’s a very scientifically derived 318. Apparently that’s the precise number of sleds that match the noise and pollution levels of the more than 10,000 cars full of flatlanders that visit the park each day in the summer. How they arrived at that very scientific conclusion is one of the great mysteries of the universe.
If you’re from here, I don’t need to explain the title to you. If you’re not, you have no idea what you’ve been missing. This is the season visitors to Island Park wait for all year — the huckleberry season. Berries started to ripen last week and will continue over the next two to three.
If you are a member of the Fall River Electric Coop (and you are if you have a cabin that has electricity in Island Park,) you are eligible to submit photos to Fall River electric for their annual photo contest.
It seems there’s a big black bear hanging around cabins in the Macks Inn area of Island Park lately. The bear has lost his natural fear of humans and is starting to make a nuisance of himself.