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Ghost Grizzles: Does the Great Bear Still Haunt Colorado?
 
 
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Ghost Grizzles: Does the Great Bear Still Haunt Colorado? [Paperback]

David Petersen (Author), Doug Peacock (Introduction)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 1998
Deep in the wilds of Colorado’s San Juan Mountains there may still lurk a remnant population of the continent’s most fearsome mammal: Ursus arctos horribilis. By 1952 it was widely assumed that the grizzly had been extirpated from Colorado. That is, until one September evening in 1979 when a hunting outfitter named Ed Wiseman was attacked by a four-hundred-pound golden-haired sow. The mauled but alive man (and the dead bear) confirmed what knowledgeable San Juan residents already knew: the Colorado grizzly was no ghost.

What has happened since that encounter almost twenty years ago is the subject of this story about the bear and our own species in the wild—and what the future may hold for both.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

After a century of declared war, Colorado's last grizzly was officially eradicated in 1952. But in 1979, while out bowhunting elk in the San Juan mountains, a guide named Ed Wiseman fought a big old sow with nothing more than a broken arrow--and won. Was this truly the "last" grizzly? David Petersen, for one, would like to know. He tracks the ghost grizzlies of the southern Rockies with a gusto that borders on mania, interviewing wildlife officials, hikers, hunters, taxidermists, and anyone else with a connection to the great bear--hoping to find evidence that a few still range Colorado's rugged backcountry. He spearheads campaigns into the wilderness and studies suspicious signs left behind. Ghost Grizzlies, his memoir of this search, is many books at once: it's a lesson in natural (and not-so-natural) history; an elegy for America's lost wildness; a very personal rumination on what it means to chase an elusive spirit; and a terrific true-mystery story that will appeal to outdoors enthusiasts, wildlife fanciers, and anyone else who enjoys a good Western yarn.

From Publishers Weekly

Officially, the last grizzly bear in Colorado was killed in 1952. Yet in 1979, a hunting outfitter was mauled by a grizzly in the San Juan Mountains (he survived). Since then, there have been a few reported sightings without scientific confirmation. Nature writer and outdoorsman Petersen is convinced that grizzlies still exist in the San Juans, and he spent four years exploring areas where the bears were seen. His forays into this pristine wilderness were made on foot and on horseback. Petersen writes about the San Juan Grizzly Project, which has explored the possibility of reintroduction (strongly opposed by ranchers and hunters). He discusses the politics of wildlife management in Colorado and ponders how much wildness its citizens want. This is a sharp portrait of the conflict between people and wilderness, a fine complement to Peacock's Grizzly Years.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Johnson Books; Revised and Updated edition (June 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1555662188
  • ISBN-13: 978-1555662189
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,260,147 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Complete and Intelligent Study, July 23, 2002
By 
Arch Stanton (Bondurant, WY USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Ghost Grizzles: Does the Great Bear Still Haunt Colorado? (Paperback)
Buy this book. Buy it new, buy it used, buy it for your friends, buy it for your enemies. Petersen has written a thoughtful and thorough examination of recent grizzly bear management policies (or lack thereof) in the San Juans of Colorado. The book is a pleasure to read.

As someone who occasionally sees grizzers on his property, I can't conceive of living in an environment that doesn't have a population of apex predators to keep things interesting. Petersen masterfully chronicles how government funded assassins with the support of short-sighted local ranching communities and clumsy land managers, managed to kill virtually every grizzly in Colorado. He also accurately details how Western ranchers have come to view public lands with more than a sense of ownership but rather with a sense of absolute entitlement. This has led them to run their stock on federal land at ridiculously cheap rates, ignore even the most commonsense principles of husbandry, and push bears and wolves into the zoos and picture books while trying to keep everyone else out. Also to blame are the Baby Huey-like semi-rich, who hack 20 acre ranchettes out of the diminishing habitat and in the process are strangling the thing they profess to love most.

Petersen manages to stay somewhat balanced, using an essay by the outspoken and bearlike Doug Peacock to say what is probably really on his mind regarding sheep ranchers and development dingbats. In the course of researching the book, Peterson also forges unlikely friendships with former (but not reformed) professional and amateur bearslayers , including Ed Wiseman, who killed the last known Colorado grizz in hand to hand combat in 1979.

There is the general belief in the book that the great bear still lives in the San Juans but has become more nocturnal and reclusive as it adapts to its shrinking habitat. There are certainly drainages wild enough to support a grizz but I personally don't believe there are any left. My heart tells me that any state with a wildlife management policy as pathetic and dumbheaded as Colorado's can't have allowed for even a single surviving great bear. Also, I am reminded of a story in Scott Weidensaul's recent (and excellent) book on vanishing species entitled "The Ghost With Trembling Wings." Weidensaul tells the story of an animal who escapes from a European zoo and whose likeness is posted on the news. Consequently, hundreds of eyewitness calls come flooding in from all over the country, each caller claiming to have personally seen the critter. It turns out that the koala had actually been run over by a train several hundred yards from the zoo immediately after escaping. Weidensaul's point is that people WANT to believe something so badly, they convince themselves of its existence. And I'm afraid that is what we are doing with the Colorado grizzly.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Oh give me home where the great bear roams . . ., August 19, 2005
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This review is from: Ghost Grizzles: Does the Great Bear Still Haunt Colorado? (Paperback)
David Peterson has compiled a thorough review of the evidence for and against (mostly for) the presence of grizzly bears in Colorado: Rio Grande National Forest and specifically the South San Juan Wilderness Area and adjoining lands. Having spent a lot of time in the area, I agree with Peterson's assessment of the wildness of the region and the possibility/probability of the grizzly's presence there.

Like most good books, more questions are raised than are answered. What happens if grizzlies are proven to live here? What assurances are there they won't be "managed to death" like other resources/wildlife? How capable are we at making decisions based on largely circumstantial evidence? Will/should we strive to obtain concrete proof?

I especially liked the accounts of the grizzly sightings and encounters. Peterson thoughtfully investigates each and the interviews with the survivors of encounters of yore are worth the price of the book. One aspect of the book that turned me off a little was Peterson's attitude toward people who derive their living from the National Forest. He paints them accross the board as a bunch of selfish ner-do-wells who have no respect for the wildlife. I disagree and it's interesting commentary from the author who, by his own admission, smokes Camels thoughout the Rio Grande National Forest.

One thing is certain, this is a spectacular corner of Colorado (and New Mexico - much of the area discussed is only a stone's throw from the border). I've stood atop Conejos Peak five times, stared down at the South San Juan, and marveled at its unspoiled beauty and rugged landscape. I've seen ptarmagan at the high mountain lakes, mountain lions in the wide open valles, and more elk than I can count. I know the real names of the geographical locales disguised by the author and, ironically, the real treasure of this region is in what it lacks: no major thoroughfares, no fourteeners, no ski areas, no big nearby population centers, and continual second billing to the trampled Western San Juans. This volcanic area is relatively unspoiled by mining, however, Peterson points to the nearsighted management practices of the National Forest Service - especially grazing - as a threat to the ecosystem, and grizzlies if they are there.

Here's what I think. Any grizzly living in the SSJWA is pretty darned good and not getting found. It's clear from the accounts that even individuals who spend a lot of time there rarely see compelling evidence of their presence. These bears won't be "proven to government standards" to exist without a huge undertaking that, as Peterson points out, would be unconscionable on many levels.

What's more, I believe there are a small handful of local backcountry locals who know for certain that grizzlies are alive and well in the Eastern San Juans. They keep it quiet to avoid the inevitable stampede that would ensue if they went public. I, for one, hope they keep the secret. Someday Colorado (and perhaps New Mexico) may be ready to deal with grizzlies in their midst. But, we are clearly not ready yet. . . . . .
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wilderness and Grizzlies: This book has it all!, August 16, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Ghost Grizzles: Does the Great Bear Still Haunt Colorado? (Paperback)
David Petersen captured my attention early in the book and kept me glued to the pages the rest of the way through. He presents the reader with a wealth of information about the grizzly bear and its natural history. Along the way, he gets you involved in some great adventures and some thought provoking searches. This is a must have book for the library of anyone interested in grizzly bears, wilderness, the Rocky Mountains, and the general outdoors. The best book I've read in a long time. Thanks David.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On a postcard-perfect Colorado evening in June, in a wooded grove on a private ranch midway between Wolf Creek Pass and the bustling tourist village of Pagosa Springs, a stout, scruffy man in his late forties addresses an equally scruffy audience gathered round a pine-scented campfire. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
grizzly spoor, grizzly restoration, marmot dig, grizzly digs, spring bear hunting, ghost grizzlies, native grizzlies, grizzly reintroduction, bear survey, grizzly sighting, black bear hunting, few grizzlies, trailing hounds, bear digs, spring hunt, government trapper, grizzly population, last grizzly, grizzly habitat, wildlife commission, bear season, bear management, bear hairs, avalanche chute, dark legs
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Juans, Tom Beck, Forest Service, Old Mose, Rio Grande, Pagosa Springs, Dennis Schutz, Grizzly Lake, Round River, Continental Divide, North Fork, Tierra Amarilla, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Glen Eyre, Schutz Hole, Colorado Wildlife Commission, Navajo River, Snowslide Canyon, Starvation Gulch, Banded Peak Ranch, Doug Peacock, Wolf Creek Pass, Blue Lake, Denver Museum of Natural History, New Mexico
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