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Julius Strauss (born in 1968) is a wilderness guide, bear behaviouralist and runs Wild Bear Lodge, a bear-viewing lodge in British Columbia. He is also a former war correspondent, guest professor and active journalist.
This is a list of explorers, trappers, guides, and other frontiersmen known as "Mountain Men". Mountain men are most associated with trapping for beaver from 1807 to the 1840s in the Rocky Mountains of the United States. Most moved on to other endeavors, but a few of them followed or adopted the mountain man life style into the 20th century.
Rare, elusive animals chased a mother bear and her cubs across the rugged terrain of the Teton Wilderness, photos show.
In 1861, Bridger was a guide for Edward L. Berthoud. From October 1863 until April 1864, Bridger was employed as a guide at Fort Laramie. [14] Bridger then served as a highly paid scout under Colonel Henry B. Carrington during Red Cloud's War. Bridger was stationed at Fort Phil Kearny during the Fetterman Fight, and the Wagon Box Fight. Bridger ...
The version in the Washington Wilderness Act, which President Ronald Reagan signed in July 1984, was more than 41,000 acres and completely in Washington. The Idaho portion is managed as wilderness ...
Holt Collier (c. 1848 – August 1, 1936) was a noted African-American bear hunter and sportsman. While leading a hunt for U.S. President Teddy Roosevelt in November 1902, Collier unwittingly set the stage for the event that originated Roosevelt's nickname, "Teddy Bear."
USA, West Yellowstone, Montana — Wilderness guide Charles "Carl" Mock, 40, was attacked on Thursday, April 15, 2021, while fishing north of West Yellowstone near Baker's Hold Campground. He was mauled by a 20-year-old male grizzly bear likely defending a moose carcass near Yellowstone National Park and died in a hospital on April 17.
The films Man in the Wilderness (1971) and The Revenant (2015) are fictionalized versions of Glass and the grizzly bear episode. Sylvan "Buckskin Bill" Hart (1906–1980), known as the "Last of the Mountain Men", [16] lived along the Salmon River in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness in Idaho from 1932 to 1980.