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Old 02-26-2008, 08:54 PM   #1
fatlazyless
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Default Ben KIlham-Bear Man-Fri-Feb 29

Orford, New Hampshire's very own Bear-Man, Ben Kilham, as seen on the Discovery Channel, will be giving a presentation this Friday, February 29, 6:30pm in Waterville Valley, NH, in the Town Square in the Brookside Room, just down beyond the little post office. Price is free, donations accepted. Presented by www.reycenter.org Suggest you get there early for a good seat!

Will he bring any bears along for show 'n tell......have no idea....but I hope so!
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Old 03-01-2008, 10:59 AM   #2
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Default Ben Kilham - Bear Man

Got there about five minutes late and had to scavenge around looking for an empty seat in the group of about 125 that were quietly watching & listening as Ben Kilham spoke from up front. He's a tall guy, must be 6'5", and he reminded me of a high school biology teacher as he spoke while slowly changing the individual photos on the large movie screen.

On television he seems to take a slower approach to discussing his favorite topic, the Black Bear. Here in person he was very energetic, a very fast and knowlegable talker and the hour really just flew by.

To a Black Bear, food is money!!!

Everything they do is all about food. The food's nutritional value, the energy needed to get it, and the risk to the bear, are all considered as a bear goes about its' daily business. Just like people need to raise cash every year to pay their property tax, the Black Bear needs to eat so it will put on weight. For a male, or younger bear to make it through hibernation, it needs to increase its' body weight by 30%. For a female that expects to get pregnant and, after a short gestation, give birth to a tiny, one pound, baby, sometime in January in its' winter den, it needs to increase its' body weight by 50%, mostly all in fat.

Listening to Ben Kilham talk, I got the sense that he is both a scientist studying the bear's behavior as well as a bear rescue facilitator that supports and trains cubs that have lost their momma. The two bear cubs that lost their momma bear when it was killed by a Laconia police officer in May 2007 at the Funspot, http://wbztv.com/watercooler/pets/Po....2.587142.html, are now hibernating at Ben's bear station over in the woods of Orford, NH.

During the question period at the hour's end, a woman asked what we should do if we ever inadvertantly meet up with a bear. Ben said: you should stand up tall, look straight at the bear, make direct eye contact, and then talk softly to it. And do not allow yourself to feel any fear, or to turn and run. Bears can smell fear, and as a preditor they are drawn toward this. A bear can use its' voice as an aggressive growl or as a soft murmur, so they will get the message when spoken to in a soft voice.

A Black Bear is just like your friendly brother-in-law, invite him over for a good dinner once, and he'll want to get friendly and stay forever, and enjoy all the good food. A bear never forgets a food source. Living mostly on plants, nuts, berries, and ants & bees or wasps; the black oil, sunflower seed that is used in bird feeders has about twice the food value of what the bear normally eats. Sort of like chocolate fudge to a human.

Watching from her house while a bear ate apples off the ground under an apple tree. A neighbor reported that every time a motor vehicle went down the nearby road, the bear would stop eating and posture itself behind the tree's trunk to hide itself from view.

In India, a bear rescue station had been keeping its' rescued bears in cages until they grew old enough to be released, only to have them all be killed and eaten by tigers. Being reared in a cage, they just did not learn their survival skills needed to go it out, alone.

Ben Kilham has three different hard- covered books on the Black Bear, plus www.benkilham.com. Suggest you check out all the photos!

One very amusing photo of two bears, probably one-year-olds, sitting just like a driver & passenger, two-up style, on an old black snowmobile!
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Old 03-01-2008, 06:47 PM   #3
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Thanks for the recap and the links. That is a great web site. Gotta love those black bears. We have loads of them down here in PA, but the only time most folks pay attention to them is when one wanders down into suburbia and climbs a tree in someone's back yard. Then Action News is on the scene and it's a big deal. Ridiculous. If only more people took the time to understand how they live, why they stray into yards and bird feeders and trash cans, and how they aren't nasty... But, as with countless other species, we're crowding into their "turf," and that can never mean anything good for the non-human...
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Old 03-06-2008, 09:39 PM   #4
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Default See it on tv.

Saturday night, March 8, 9pm, the National Geographic Channel presents a new documentary on your neighbor Ben Kilham from Orford, NH.....'A Man Among Bears."

After the show, I'll post a 25 question, fill-in-the-blanks quiz, and the winner will receive a brand new and unopened, box of granola!
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Old 03-07-2008, 08:42 AM   #5
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We have a "bear man" locally.Moose Evans in Sandwich has some great photo's of himself hand feeding a huge black bear that he befriended.Moose is a pretty big guy and the bear stands as tall as he is.
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Old 03-07-2008, 08:50 AM   #6
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We have a "bear man" locally.Moose Evans in Sandwich has some great photo's of himself hand feeding a huge black bear that he befriended.Moose is a pretty big guy and the bear stands as tall as he is.
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Old 03-07-2008, 12:48 PM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fatlazyless View Post
Saturday night, March 8, 9pm, the National Geographic Channel presents a new documentary on your neighbor Ben Kilham from Orford, NH.....'A Man Among Bears."

After the show, I'll post a 25 question, fill-in-the-blanks quiz, and the winner will receive a brand new and unopened, box of granola!
No thanks - Walmart's is cheap stuff. Packaged in China I think.
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