By MICHAEL HANLON
It's all too much for tired grizzly as he rests beside a stream after hard day catching salmon under water
Smarter than the average bear: This one checks out a waterproof camera
They are some of the most powerful carnivores on Earth, weighing up to half a ton each, and, if riled, they won’t think twice about attacking humans.
So getting up close and personal with the grizzly and brown bears of Alaska shows a degree of courage bordering on lunacy.
Without this risk-taking, Paul Sounders, a 50-year-old wildlife photographer from Seattle, would never have captured these exquisite images.
Some of the pictures were taken with the magnificient creatures just 12 inches from the camera lens.
Relaxing: The bear sniffs the air as he lies back and rests near a salmon stream
So how did Sounders avoid being eaten?
‘There are some bears who want nothing to do with people, and some who are quite tolerant — even curious,’ he explains.
Paul travelled alone to Kodiak Island in Alaska and the nearby Katmai National Park on a 22ft motor boat. For six weeks he roamed up and down 60 miles of bear-inhabited coastline.
Now which one shall I eat? The bear edges closer to the school of salmon
‘Katmai’s bears live in paradise,’ he says. ‘They have plenty of food — sedge grasses in the spring, abundant salmon and berries in the summer and autumn.
‘These bears haven’t been hunted for more than a century, and that’s the main reason they don’t fear us. We’re not a threat, we’re not food — and if you’re not a complete idiot they leave you in peace.’
The bear is perfectly at ease as it swims through the waters in search for his lunch
Majestic: It's hard to believe this impressive half-ton brown bear would have weighed just one pound when born
If you go down to the beach: A snap of a grizzly hunting salmon by moonlight
source: dailymail
It's all too much for tired grizzly as he rests beside a stream after hard day catching salmon under water

They are some of the most powerful carnivores on Earth, weighing up to half a ton each, and, if riled, they won’t think twice about attacking humans.
So getting up close and personal with the grizzly and brown bears of Alaska shows a degree of courage bordering on lunacy.
Without this risk-taking, Paul Sounders, a 50-year-old wildlife photographer from Seattle, would never have captured these exquisite images.
Some of the pictures were taken with the magnificient creatures just 12 inches from the camera lens.

So how did Sounders avoid being eaten?
‘There are some bears who want nothing to do with people, and some who are quite tolerant — even curious,’ he explains.
Paul travelled alone to Kodiak Island in Alaska and the nearby Katmai National Park on a 22ft motor boat. For six weeks he roamed up and down 60 miles of bear-inhabited coastline.

‘Katmai’s bears live in paradise,’ he says. ‘They have plenty of food — sedge grasses in the spring, abundant salmon and berries in the summer and autumn.
‘These bears haven’t been hunted for more than a century, and that’s the main reason they don’t fear us. We’re not a threat, we’re not food — and if you’re not a complete idiot they leave you in peace.’



source: dailymail
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.