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Walking with Giants: The Grizzlies of Siberia
A Sad Update

It is with great sadness that I write this update to all of you.

In May of 2003, Maureen and I arrived at our cabin in Kamchatka for our eighth year in the field, studying the bears chronicled in Walking with Giants. Rosie, Chico, and Biscuit had become part of our family, and we were excited and anxious to see how they were doing. What we found on our arrival was unimaginable: a bear gall bladder hanging on the wall. At first we refused to accept this proclamation as the barbarous message it was meant to be. But as time passed and we could find no trace of any of the bears we had come to know so well, we were forced to accept the meaning of the message: While we had been away for the winter, all our wonderful bears had been killed. Maureen and I could hardly function we were so devastated.

The loss of these bears plunged us deep into grief and anger, and we have struggled to understand the nature of the slaughter. Was this horrible and incontrovertible proof that bears are more adaptable and forgiving than people are? Had these bears been killed precisely because of our success with them?

In time, we would come to understand that it was the success of the ranger program we had funded to protect our bears that ended up being their undoing. People in Kamchatka had finally been coming around to the notion that a live bear was worth more to them than a poached bear. The World Heritage Site in which our cabin sits had long been a sanctuary for poachers, not wildlife, and someone clearly wanted a return to the old status quo.

I have not given up on the work in Kamchatka. From the time I learned that the efficiency of our ranger program was threatening enough to bring about the death of our bears, I have been looking into how I can possibly keep it functioning. I will find a way to continue on my own until some organization, agency or perhaps the Russian government itself, can relieve me.

Although the South Kamchatka Sanctuary, where we have lived with our bears for eight years, has been proclaimed a World Heritage Site, without some form of substantial protection the designation is meaningless. I am determined to find a way to give this wonderful area the care it deserves. As for our ranger program, some crucial aspects of the program have to be adjusted. In the spring of 2004 I will go to Moscow, then on to the Far East to attend meetings in Petropavlovsk.

I have also long seen a need in North America to help communities coexist with bears and other wildlife. I am working on an opportunity to apply much of what our bears taught us in Russia, to our everyday living with them here. I anticipate this will keep me busy for years.

I would like to thank all of you for your letters of concern and your calls for justice. They have helped Maureen and I make it through one of the most difficult times in our lives. It’s people like you who continue to spread the word, help make this world a friendlier place and give us conviction and perseverance to stay on course. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

- Charlie Russell

* * *

If you’re interested in learning more about Charlie and Maureen’s bear research in Kamchatka, they’ve written two books on the subject: Grizzly Heart: Living Without Fear Among the Brown Bears of Kamchatka and Grizzly Seasons, the companion album of photos.

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6 responses
Penny Normandin -- November 15th, 2008 at 4:33 pm

I’m not surprised at what people are capable of. The word Human is a misnomer for people. I hope people can learn to live with animals, but think most can’t be bothered. A lot of misconceptions are still held by the authorities, trickling those beliefs down through the public.

Maria Sutherland -- May 21st, 2009 at 10:01 am

While on holiday in Fernie, Canada I had the pleasure of reading Grizzly Heart it was in the Condo we were staying in .I could not put the book down and was deeply moved by it.I have been trying to find the follow up books to find out what happend to the bears.I am very glad to have found this website it has all I have been looking for.

Kate Malheiro -- July 6th, 2009 at 12:32 am

This is totally unacceptable behavior by man. I am truly saddened to hear of this!

Mike Malheiro -- July 6th, 2009 at 8:19 am

Ahhh man once again proves why he doesn’t deserve to share earth with the animals. I can only hope we are destroyed before we kill everything first.

Sunny -- July 28th, 2009 at 3:42 am

After seeing the photo of Charlie sitting by a stream with Biscuit, I stumbled into cloudline and found myself reading the journals of Kamchatka late into the night and early morning.

They were filled with love and humor when it came to the cubs, tempered with the humility and honesty of their woes with a rugged cabin, horrid weather, travel difficulties and red tape.

I followed their story and that of their bears through the years and into the early morning. I felt like I had watched the bears grow up and looked forward with edge-of-my-seat eagerness to each new year’s worth of chronicles.

2003 was heartbreaking. So much anticipation, potential, and love coming to an almost unbelievably cruel and bitter end. Only having known the bears for a day, the devastation at never seeing Biscuit with her cubs, she who had already shown she would be a wonderful mother from when she was a cub herself, was heartwrenching. I can only imagine Charlie and Maureen’s pain, having known the cubs for so many years.

Thank you for this amazingly personal insight into not just bears, but how close and peaceful and fulfilling that human relationships with these magnificent creatures can be. Your story is one that will resonate with me for life. It goes beyond human-bear relationships. It’s a step towards reconnecting with a more natural relationship with the world and everything in it. Rebuilding the bridges is difficult work, but thank you Charlie and Maureen for showing us how to start.

joerg -- August 16th, 2009 at 2:17 pm

i just finished reading “grizzly heart” and wanted to get more information about the whole project. then i stumbled over this article and found my self crying on my couch. cant say what me real felings are, because i think i would get arrested for them. but grief and anger are pretty close to it. i felt so close to all the bears which where discribed so wonderfull by charlie and maureen. btw thanks for that wonderfull book and all your work!!!
i know some time has passed but ireally would like to know how the story when out and what you guys are doing now. is that project still alive? are people able to help there from outside with spending money or doing what ever to help?
if there is a chance let me know. i´m still stunned after reading theese dispicable news, even if there are nor “news” anymore.

i´m not an english native speaker, but i hope my feelings and thinking became clear.

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