About Us
www.StoptheGrizzlyHunt.org was co-founded by Julius Strauss, a former war correspondent who now runs a small eco-tourism lodge in the Kootenays, Charlie Russell, the veteran grizzly conservationist, and Fred Easton, a founder member of Greenpeace.
The three came together in October 2009 from different walks of life to oppose this outdated practice.
Nelson, BC – Charlie Russell, the iconic grizzly bear behavioral expert
who has worked around the world with threatened grizzly populations,
has called for an end to the grizzly hunt in BC.
Joining
two other veterans from different walks of life – Julius Strauss, a
former long-serving war correspondent, and Fred Easton, a founder
member of Greenpeace – he said that it was time to introduce a new
management style for grizzly bears.
Russell was speaking in
Nelson, BC, ahead of a showing of his documentary The Edge of Eden. His
message is all the more resonant as he comes from a family of ranchers
and hunters.
He said that the time for trophy hunting has passed
and that government officials and biologists should change their way of
managing the species.
Russell said: "I spent the better part of my life treating bears as friends and it works."
"If Parks people and bear managers could start talking about them in a different way, we would get rid of the fear."
Russell
said that the demonization of grizzly bears by hunters only fed into
the cycle of fear and violence that prevented better coexistence with
humans.
Russell, who famously worked with orphaned cubs in
Kamchatka in Russia's Far East, was joined by Strauss and Easton in
calling for an end to the hunt.
The three announced they have
formed a pressure group, www.stopthegrizzlyhunt.org to try and persuade
the BC provincial government to drop the grizzly hunt.
Strauss,
who worked in some of the world's most dangerous countries before
emigrating to Canada several years ago to set up an eco-tourism
operation, said: "It's time that the BC government woke up and smelled
the coffee.
"The rest of the world already thinks we are
Neanderthals for allowing the legal hunt of an iconic and threatened
species and the polls show that the vast majority of BC residents agree
with them."
"Our reputation is being sullied for the sake of a tiny minority that appears to have the ear of government."
Easton,
who as a young man famously took the footage of Russian whalers in the
Pacific as part of the international Save the Whale campaign, said:
"All three of us have come together from different walks of life
because BC needs to redefine its moral compass."
"We can't strut
around pretending we are the Best Place on Earth and Beautiful BC and
then cynically allow the slaughter of some of the very animals that
make us so special."
The latest call for an end to the grizzly
hunt comes amid growing pressure on the BC government from
conservationists and ordinary residents ahead of the Winter Olympics.
In a poll last year, 78 percent of BC residents said that they considered the hunt unethical.
On
the BC coast recent reports from eco-tourism operators have suggested
that the number of bears is down dramatically after two years of poor
salmon runs.
A recent survey in Alberta found there were only 581 grizzly bears left outside the national parks.
The
BC Ministry of Environment, which obtains substantial programme funding
from hunters and from hunting organizations, maintains that the
population is still healthy.
But a recent study of grizzly
numbers in the Selkirk and Purcell mountains suggested the government
has over-estimated the number of grizzly bears.
After pressure
from local residents, the Kootenay branch of the Ministry of
Environment recently put on hold a plan to extend the grizzly hunt by
10 days each year.
Around 55 grizzly bears are legally killed
each year in the Kootenays and taken as a trophy. The number for the
whole of BC is around 300.
The Ministry of Environment requires
that hunters take the skull and part of the penis or a testicle for a
male and part of the teat or mammary gland for a female to prove the
animal's sex. About one third of the bears shot are females.
Eco-tourism
operators offering bear-viewing holidays to tourists bring in many
times the income from non-resident hunters who come to BC to kill
grizzly bears as trophies.