View allAll Photos Tagged bearhunt...
We're going on a bear hunt.
We're going to catch a big one.
What a beautiful day!
We're not scared.
From: "We're Going On A Bear Hunt" by Michael Rosen & illustrated by Helen Oxenburg
Our companion boat, leading the way across Chilko Lake, in search of more Grizzlies.
Joining me in Shenandoah National Park this June? www.the-digital-picture.com/News/News-Post.aspx?News=30211
Get the backstory on this image and learn about the gear and settings used here: www.the-digital-picture.com/Pictures/Picture.aspx?Picture...
Please put a bear in your window! According to the Guardian it started in New Zealand and is now spreading around the world. Based on an idea from the children's book by Michael Rosen; during the current restrictions children when out for a walk with their parents look for bears in peoples windows; they go on a bear hunt.
Our adventures in Canada were done, so we happily returned to the United States & headed to one of the most beautiful areas in the country, Glacier Park in Montana. We had been there 3 years before & a black bear ran right in front of us, so we were hoping to see even more bears. We stopped on the road at Many Glacier Park so my boys could watch the trail ride. My antsy husband decided he just HAD to get a closer look at the roaring water and headed off to the right. On the left I spotted two photogs with honkin' big lenses & an older man that looked like he was watching something in the gentle stream below so I decided to see what they were checking out. My instincts were right~~they had found bears!
A brown bear leaps for a salmon swimming downstream in Lake Clark National Park, Alaska, August 2012.
Op straat is het stiller dan anders, maar op de rivier is wel veel verkeer te zien.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The street it is quieter than usual, but on the river we can see a lot of traffic.
View from the point where the Chilko River widens into the Chilko Lake. Early Autumn in British Columbia.
Everybody who's outside is having a teddy bear hunt. Hope people can find me through this window. 😁🐻 - Barry-Benny Bear
#bearhunt #teddybearchallenge #teddybearchallenge2020 #teddybearhunt #coronavirus #covid19 #teddybearinthewindow #bearinthewindow #stayhome
Covid-19 / Corona makes people stay at home. Schools are closed but children need to go out every now and then. People place teddy bears in their windows and the challenge for kids then is to spot as many as possible.
Printed and hand-colored map created as part of the local Orange County programs of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in the 1930s. This image was taken from a somewhat blurry slide in the County Planning Department records. The location of the uniquely decorated map depicted here is unknown, although other copies of the underlying historical map are not difficult to find.
There are no known copyright restrictions on this image. All future uses of this photo should include the courtesy line, "Photo courtesy Orange County Archives."
Comments are welcome after reading our Comment Policy.
Ac#1986.30-31 (PC1676)
:)
If you'd like a copy of this, please Flickr mail me with an off site email address and I'll send you a copy.
Thanks, Denise, for the inspiration!
This is taken word for word from one of Katie Couric's interviews:
PALIN:
"As Putin rears his head and comes into the air space of the United States of America, where do they go? It's Alaska.
In fact, war has got to make sure that an eye on Russia and Putin and some of his government are extremely dangerous to everyone on this very powerful nation, Russia, because they are violent and they do not like the idea though of taxpayers being used to bailout these corporations.
We have good guys are."
Back of photo states 'Canadian Size Bear'- Ontario Canada. Bob Peltzer shot this one at Salmond’s Hunt Camp near Cloyne. The bear reportedly weighed 825 lbs.
Note: Commercial use of this image is prohibited without CDHS permission. All CDHS Flickr content is available for personal use providing our Rights Statement is followed:
Kingston We're Going on a Bear Hunt 29 March - 7 June 2024
Spectrum
Created by: Christine Jopling
Location: Kingston Bridge (originally at Fusebox and moved after being damaged)
TZ70_4_P1000551
Ken Salmond and Ron Brown with bear- May 1985.
Note: Commercial use of this image is prohibited without CDHS permission. All CDHS Flickr content is available for personal use providing our Rights Statement is followed:
Another one of Groovy Bear-by in Corporation Street, Birmingham.This time he’s going head to head, both runners wearing blinkers…
Sculpture art by Caroline Daly.
Middenweg 05/04/2020 08h40
Placing a teddy bear in front of the window as a sign of support, togetherness and love for the carers of society. In this way, children can have a teddy bear treasure hunt through the neighborhoods.
Everyone is requested to stay at home, but the Netherlands is undergoing an intelligent lock down, so walking through the neighborhood is still permitted.
Corona Crisis in Amsterdam (my special album on Flickr)
SOCIAL DISTANCING (1.5 METERS)
STAY HOME
FLATTEN THE CURVE
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,4368
Subject (TGM): Coffee industry; Statehood; Men; Animals; Bears; Bear hunting; Maps;
Le fond argileux très blanc et les herbes aquatiques renvoient le bleu du ciel c'est pourquoi les Fontenils sont appelées les "Eaux Bleues". Rivière le "Lien".
The clavey bottom, very white and the aquatic grass reflect the blue sky. It's why "les Fontenils" are called " the Blue Waters". The name of this river is "le lien".
Pour Mitch (bearhunter_canada) , une petite truite française ! (a little french trout !)
Tavers, Loiret, France
.......................................................
True colors , couleurs véritables.
File name: 10_03_003175a
Binder label: Stock Cards
Title: Man with dagger and dogs hunting a bear which is attacking another hunter. [front]
Date issued: 1870-1900 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 print : chromolithograph ; 8 x 12 cm.
Genre: Advertising cards
Subject: Men; Dogs; Bears; Bear hunting
Notes: Title supplied by cataloger. Item verso is blank.
Collection: 19th Century American Trade Cards
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
Social distancing practices have inspired my neighbourhood to participate in a “bear hunt”, where teddy bears are placed in windows for kiddos to spot when they walk around the neighbourhood. I do not have a bear, but I have a flamingo.
That reminded me of the song about the guys standing on the corner watching all the girls go by.
The idea of the bear in the window of course is COVID19 activities for kids to go through neighborhoods and look for Teddy Bears placed for that purpose. It's called a Bear Hunt.
Local Accession Number: 06_11_004486
Title: A camp scene - hanging up the big bear
Statement of responsibility: Geo. Barker, Photographer
Creator/Contributor: Barker, George, 1844-1894 (photographer)
Genre: Stereographs; Photographic prints; Portrait photographs; Group portraits
Created/Published: [New York, N.Y.] : Strohmeyer & Wyman, Publishers
Copyright date: 1893
Physical description: 1 photographic print on curved stereo card : stereograph ; 9 x 18 cm.
General notes: Title from item.; Copyright, 1893, by Geo. Barker.
Subjects: Log cabins; Bear hunting; Hunting lodges; Bears
Collection: Harper Stereograph Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Shelf locator: Misc.
Rights: No known restrictions
Prints: daniel-eskridge.artistwebsites.com/featured/bear-hunt-dan...
"Bear Hunt"
This is a scene from the Blackfoot story "The Bear Woman". In the story, a woman refuses to get married, much to the consternation of her family. One day, her little sister follows her into the wilderness to spy on her and learns that she has taken a bear as husband. She tells her father and brothers who then find and kill the bear. Later, the Bear Woman gains the ability to transform into a bear herself. After slaughtering her village, there is a chase between her and her brothers who eventually kill her, but, having no people to return to, they ascend to the skies and become the stars of the great bear constellation.
The part of the story I've depicted here is near the end where the brothers clash with their sister who has taken her bear form. Two Native American warriors on the backs of mustangs encounter a massive brown bear on a snowy field under cloud filled evening skies. The lead hunter draws back his bow and takes aim from galloping mount, while the other holds aloft his lance as his horse rears. The bear charges savagely, kicking up a shower of powdery snow as it roars in anger.
Whilst out walking the dog Emma decided to go on a bear hunt. Poor Jack had no idea what she was talking about and was rather reluctant to go! She saw the fear in his eyes and dragged him into the "freaky forest"(thank you Dora) to look for them.
Thankfully for Jack none were found!
File name: 10_03_003173a
Binder label: Stock Cards
Title: Three men on horses hunting a bear, one with a noose. [front]
Date issued: 1870-1900 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 print : chromolithograph ; 8 x 12 cm.
Genre: Advertising cards
Subject: Men; Horses; Bears; Bear hunting
Notes: Title supplied by cataloger. Item verso is blank.
Collection: 19th Century American Trade Cards
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/tradecards,3944
Subject (TGM): Coffee industry; Maps; Statehood; Animals; Bear hunting; Bears;
Theodore Roosevelt had a wide range of interests and achievements before becoming president. He had a ranch in North Dakota on the banks of the Little Missouri where he learned to ride western style, rope and hunt. He identified himself as a cowboy and began writing about frontier life for national magazines, as well as publishing books about ranch life and his hunting trips. As a deputy sheriff, he tracked down three outlaws who stole his riverboat and were escaping north.
“Capturing the outlaws, he decided against hanging them (apparently yielding to established law procedures in place of vigilante justice), and sending his foreman back by boat, he took the thieves back overland for trial in Dickinson, guarding them forty hours without sleep and reading Tolstoy to keep himself awake. When he ran out of his own books, he read a dime store western that one of the thieves was carrying. While searching for a group of relentless horse thieves, Roosevelt met Seth Bullock, the famous sheriff of Deadwood, South Dakota. The two would remain friends for life.” [Wikipedia]
Theodore Roosevelt was a hunter, rancher, cowboy, sheriff, soldier, politician and “conservationist.” As president, he used his position to pave the way for environmentalists of the future, setting aside land for national forests, establishing wildlife refuges, and advocating protection of natural resources. Throughout his life and work, Roosevelt remained focused on future generations and on the condition of the earth that they would inherit.
(Note: An inexpensive viewer can turn the side-by-side images on the computer screen into a 3-D image. The viewer is available for $4.95 from the following source: