It's a wolf pack versus a hungry grizzly. Just another day in Yellowstone National Park as valuable food sources were in the middle of a wolf versus bear confrontation.
I've never seen anything quite like this before. A new video share from Yellowstone National Park seems to show a bison bull chasing off wolves and bears after one of their own is fallen.
I've seen grizzly bears in Yellowstone National Park do just about everything. It wasn't until today that I've never seen one sleeping. Thanks to a new video share by a very recent visitor to the park, I can now put a check in that box, too.
Are you a morning person? No? Then perhaps you can identify with a grizzly that just woke up from a long hibernation in the Tetons and does not appear to be in a good mood. At all.
I've seen a lot of wolf/bear encounters in Yellowstone National Park, but I rarely see it go this way. A recent visitor to the park shared video of a white wolf chasing off a big bear.
We see people that visit Yellowstone and the Tetons do photography wrong so often, it's easy to forget how epic it can be when it's done right. One photographer recently visited our national parks in Wyoming and showed the proper way to take pictures of the wildlife we treasure.
If you're a mom, you know life isn't easy. The same goes for grizzlies as a new video share shows that it's hard to get some time to yourself when you have little ones.
This guy must have nerves of steel and ice water flowing through his veins. A bear whisperer is shown on video convincing a huge grizzly to leave a populated area just by asking.
Ever think of having a grizzly as a pet? If so, you need to rethink that idea. I've found several minutes of grizzly bears behaving badly to keep you from making a tragic mistake.
If you're fortunate enough to live in the wild backcountry of Wyoming, you just might get a visit from greatness. That was the case as a lady in a remote Wyoming tiny house was recently visited by world famous Grizzly 399 and her 4 cubs.
My family has traveled to Yellowstone National Park several times over the years. During our visits, we never encountered the grizzly named "Scarface". That's a shame. He was a legend in the park and it's worth remembering how he got his name, why he was so well known and how me met his tragic end.
If you learned there was a grizzly feeding nearby, what would you do? If you're a group of horses in a new video I've found, you heard up and stare down the predator.