- Apr 9, 2011
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The photos in the second link made me smile; I worked in the same program as Rocky Spencer for a while, and there he was, happy in his work.
We had a bear shot not far from me about five years ago, when Rocky Spencer was still alive; it had been hit crossing a road a couple of days earlier and was too ill to be rehabillitated. Rocky was visibly upset when he was interviewed on television: it really was his goal to find ways to save animals, and the beardogs are a great legacy to him. (He died falling from a helicopter while doing large=animal relocation).
We were all saddened with that tragic accident that took Rocky's life
Rocky was a wonderful guy. In our neighborhood we all knew him (we are up against the Seattle Watershed, so we get lots of wildlife) Rocky was tracking several cougars in the neighborhood. I had a neighbor fro NYC a mile down the hill from me raising chickens in a beautiful sturdy coop. The bear ripped the coop apart to get to her chickens! They tried trapping the bear, but the bear got the food without setting it off, so her hubby who's deaf bought a gun. I have no clue how this happened, but it did. Margaret was walking down her driveway with her 2 dogs (very long driveway on 20 acres) when a bear came out of the woods and headed straight for her. She screamed, hubby must hear high pitches because he ran outside and from right by the house shot that bear square in the forehead and killed it! Rocky came out then and he told her, BTW, she also had a den on her property with 3 cougars! (momma and babies I assume). She put her house on the market and moved! Rocky also came out when a different neighbor was having dinner on her deck with her nephew who coincidentally was studying to be a game officer in Wisconsin. They were watching a mother deer with her to newborn fawns when a cougar came out of the woods and hid behind a stump. in one leap it went over the giant old stump and killed one of the babies, and then got spooked and ran off. Rocky baited a trap with the fawn, but they caught a bear instead. I think I may have pictures of that one. I thankfully was not around when he released it, but he was standing on top of the cage, and when he opened it, instead of running off, the bear first turned and took a swipe at Rocky (missed), and then ran.
I heard he died a little differently - the hellicopter had set him down, and as it was about to take off, Rocky noticed a rope across a skid and went to move it. The pilot had also noticed it and turned the helicopter to get out from under it not knowing Rocky was there. Rocky was killed by the tail rotor. The pilot was his friend, they worked together frequently.
Either way, how tragic, and horrible for the pilot.
I'm going by the story that was in the Daily Zero: it may or may not have reflected reality.
North Bend is smack up against wild land, but short of the middle of one of the farming counties there's nowhere in this state where a bear or cougar might not show up(there have been both in Seattle, with cougars a little more likely, over the years), and the people who work on ways to keep those encounters from getting tragic are heros.
Not that it's just this state; John McPhee has a long article about bears in suburban New Jersey, including a mama bear who habitually denned up under the porch of somebody's weekend place.
The photos in the second link made me smile; I worked in the same program as Rocky Spencer for a while, and there he was, happy in his work.
We had a bear shot not far from me about five years ago, when Rocky Spencer was still alive; it had been hit crossing a road a couple of days earlier and was too ill to be rehabillitated. Rocky was visibly upset when he was interviewed on television: it really was his goal to find ways to save animals, and the beardogs are a great legacy to him. (He died falling from a helicopter while doing large=animal relocation).
We were all saddened with that tragic accident that took Rocky's life
Rocky was a wonderful guy. In our neighborhood we all knew him (we are up against the Seattle Watershed, so we get lots of wildlife) Rocky was tracking several cougars in the neighborhood. I had a neighbor fro NYC a mile down the hill from me raising chickens in a beautiful sturdy coop. The bear ripped the coop apart to get to her chickens! They tried trapping the bear, but the bear got the food without setting it off, so her hubby who's deaf bought a gun. I have no clue how this happened, but it did. Margaret was walking down her driveway with her 2 dogs (very long driveway on 20 acres) when a bear came out of the woods and headed straight for her. She screamed, hubby must hear high pitches because he ran outside and from right by the house shot that bear square in the forehead and killed it! Rocky came out then and he told her, BTW, she also had a den on her property with 3 cougars! (momma and babies I assume). She put her house on the market and moved! Rocky also came out when a different neighbor was having dinner on her deck with her nephew who coincidentally was studying to be a game officer in Wisconsin. They were watching a mother deer with her to newborn fawns when a cougar came out of the woods and hid behind a stump. in one leap it went over the giant old stump and killed one of the babies, and then got spooked and ran off. Rocky baited a trap with the fawn, but they caught a bear instead. I think I may have pictures of that one. I thankfully was not around when he released it, but he was standing on top of the cage, and when he opened it, instead of running off, the bear first turned and took a swipe at Rocky (missed), and then ran.
I heard he died a little differently - the hellicopter had set him down, and as it was about to take off, Rocky noticed a rope across a skid and went to move it. The pilot had also noticed it and turned the helicopter to get out from under it not knowing Rocky was there. Rocky was killed by the tail rotor. The pilot was his friend, they worked together frequently.
Either way, how tragic, and horrible for the pilot.
I'm going by the story that was in the Daily Zero: it may or may not have reflected reality.
North Bend is smack up against wild land, but short of the middle of one of the farming counties there's nowhere in this state where a bear or cougar might not show up(there have been both in Seattle, with cougars a little more likely, over the years), and the people who work on ways to keep those encounters from getting tragic are heros.
Not that it's just this state; John McPhee has a long article about bears in suburban New Jersey, including a mama bear who habitually denned up under the porch of somebody's weekend place.
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