
I don't think he's part of this Alaskan street gang:

An "over-nighter" at the San Diego Zoo?Any guesses where this was taken? Alaska, Montana, Colorado, Canada,, etc., etc.
As mentioned in the link above, a grizzly was killed in Colorado in 1979, after being thought extinct in the state for many years. Heckuva story, a bowhunter and guide came face to face with an old sow grizz under questionable circumstances, he wound up killing the bear Tarzan style, by stabbing it to death with an arrow while being mauled. He was in some hot water over the incident, but wound up in the clear.Netpackrat wrote:(T)hat picture probably isn't in Colorado, since the official line seems to be that there are no grizzlies in Colorado anymore.
You can read the rest here:Ghost grizzlies - grizzly bears in Colorado
E: The Environmental Magazine, Jan-Feb, 1997 by David Petersen
Does the Great Bear Still Haunt Colorado?
The San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado hold some of the richest grizzly habitat in North America, and in prehistoric times the great bears were ubiquitous there. But by the mid-19th century, killing by ranchers and government trappers had reduced Colorado's grizzlies to a few shy survivors. In 1952, after a federal trapper killed an adult female north of Pagosa Springs in the south San Juan Mountains, wildlife officials declared the grizzly extinct statewide. Across the next 28 years, many credible grizzly sightings were reported in the San Juans, yet the official word remained: gone.
Then, in 1979, along the Continental Divide south of Pagosa Springs, an "extinct" Colorado grizzly was surprised on its day bed by a bowhunter named Ed Wiseman. The bear, perhaps feeling cornered, attacked. Wiseman was knocked to the ground and severely mauled, but managed to stab and kill the bear with a hand-held arrow.
Through the summers of 1981 and 1982, the Colorado Division of Wildlife conducted an extensive live-trapping operation in hopes of capturing, radio-collaring and releasing any remaining San Juan grizzlies. Failing in this - and in spite of the fact that search leader Tom Beck, a renowned black bear biologist, stated in his final report that "failure to catch a grizzly does not mean a definite absence of bears" - the state reverted to its traditional "extinct" stance.
More like an M82 Barrett. But the .450 Marlin Guide Gun would have to do, since I'm not likely to be packing a .50 BMG around.Termite wrote:Mike's picture looks like a job for Mjolner, my 9.3x62. 286gn RNSP @ 2300-2400fps should do nicely. Or maybe NPR's Marlin Guide gun.
workinwifdakids wrote:MV Gun Counter: "We're like Blackwater, except without the impulse control."
Random Internet Moron wrote: "High Caliber Magazine Clips are only useful for random slaughter of innocent civilians, so they should only be used by the police."
That'd do well for the first pic,Termite wrote:Mike's picture looks like a job for Mjolner, my 9.3x62. 286gn RNSP @ 2300-2400fps should do nicely. Or maybe NPR's Marlin Guide gun.