Showing posts with label Northwoods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northwoods. Show all posts

Thursday, January 25, 2018

Camp Creature: Striped Skunk

"You won't believe what happened to me last night. I was out on one of my nightly walks around camp when my life flashed before my eyes. Well, that might be dramatic, but I did almost step right on a doe feeding on grubs near the Gaga Pit. I know you're thinking, 'What!? Deer eat grubs?!' But I'm not talking about deer. I'm talking about skunks. Did you know skunks are also referred to as buck and doe? Anyway, I look down and see a set of eyes peering up at me, I whip out my flashlight, catch a glimpse of black and white, and I bolted out of there at a dead sprint. I didn't stop until I reached the top of the Marina. Again, a little dramatic, but I had to know I was safely out of reach of that putrid spray."

A few summers ago, those are the words Alli shared with us one morning that started our little love affair with a really interesting camp creature: the striped skunk. As a team, we didn't know all that much about skunks beyond the fact they are capable of shooting out a disgusting musk, which was something we did not want to experience!

But what was bringing these little guys into camp?

Grubs. It was a summer with a high grub population, which allowed for a boom in skunk reproduction and activity. As a nocturnal creature, skunks would wander into camp at night to dig for grubs in the soil. Thus leading to Alli's encounter with her new skunk friend. These encounters happened multiple times throughout late summer and into the fall, but the skunks never felt threatened enough to spray, allowing us to make it out of the summer unscathed. Thankfully, this skunk population has moved on and our skunk sightings have been infrequent as of late.

Skunks maybe aren't the most desired visitor, but they sure are an interesting critter to learn about, especially when it became clear they weren't here to maliciously spray their rancid musk. For more information on skunks, check out this Minnesota DNR: Striped Skunk info page!

I've also heard skunks can make good pets... If you have more info on this, I'd love to hear all about it!
 

Monday, December 17, 2012

Camp Creature - The Minnesota Black Bear

A juvenile Minnesota Black Bear
Are there bears at Camp Foley?  Possibly...  While we certainly don’t see them wandering through camp every day, one species of North American bear is indigenous to the North woods.  It’s the Minnesota Black Bear, otherwise known as the North American Black Bear.

Black Bears are closely related to Brown and Polar Bears.  They can grow to weigh 150-600 lbs., and stand 5-7 ft. tall when up on their hind legs.  While most Black Bears have a rich, black coat; about 6% actually have brown coats.

Black Bear and cub
Unlike Grizzly Bears, Black Bears are rarely aggressive towards humans.  In most cases, Black Bears will run or retreat from humans unless they feel they are being threatened, a human is trying to harm their cubs, or their escape path has been cut off.  The most common reason humans are attacked by Black Bears is because they make the mistake of trying to feed them.

In spite of the fact that Black Bears have been over-hunted in previous decades, the Minnesota DNR estimates that there are now about 27,000 in Minnesota, and they have been removed from the endangered species list.  Hunters still need a special permit to hunt them, but a small number are taken each year with bows and arrows, muzzleloaders, and modern rifles.

Black Bears are an arboreal (tree-climbing) species
One of the reasons Black Bears were able to repopulate so quickly is because they are versatile omnivores.  Black Bears eat plants, insects, and animals they find on land, in the water, and in the trees.  As an arboreal bear, they continue to have the ability to climb trees even as adults.  Up to 85% of the Black Bears’ diet is plant life.  Especially in early spring when they are thin and weak from long periods of inactivity, Black Bears will often feed on roots, plants, and young shoots from emerging trees.  While they don't technically "hibernate," they do enter into a similar long-term sedative state during winter months where they can lose up to 40% of their body weight.

Black Bear cub
As Black Bears regain their strength and muscle, they’ll begin adding fish from local lakes and streams; and other forms of meat to their diet.  Although Black Bears can run up to 35 mph for short distances, they can’t keep up that pace long enough to be effective predators of small game.  Occasionally they will catch and eat moose, beaver, and other animals, but they are much more likely to feed on carrion they locate with their powerful sense of smell, or scare away smaller predators that have recently made a kill, and steal their prey.

1914 photo of the Black Bear
who was the inspiration for
"Winnie The Pooh"
Black Bears love honey and have been known to tear deep into trees to get to nests of bees.  They will often eat the entire hive’s supply of honey even while being repeatedly stung, and in fact often eat honeybees and other hives of insects.  Perhaps this trait is what inspired novelist A.A. Milne to name his character Winnie the Pooh after a famous Black Bear named Winnipeg, who lived at the London Zoo.




This Famous Political Cartoon of Theodore Roosevelt
that appeared in the Washington Post newspaper
inspired the creation of the 1st "Teddy" Bear.
Black Bears have had quite an impact on American history:  Morris Michtom, the creator of the teddy bear, got the idea to create this children’s stuffed animal when he saw a political cartoon (based on a true event) of President Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt refusing to shoot a black bear that his hunting guide had tied to a tree.  And in 1950, a Black Bear cub that was rescued from the Capitan Gap fire in a National Forest became the first mascot of the United States Forest Service. They named him "Smokey the Bear."

Have you ever seen a bear while out hiking or camping?  If so, how did you react?

You can learn more about the Black Bear from the Minnesota DNR's website, or The American Bear Association, which is also located in Minnesota.