Author’s Note: “Cubs Bred to the Slaughter” is the third in a series about Bear World. If interested in reading them in order, here’s the first post and the second.
Continue readingAuthor’s Note: “Cubs Bred to the Slaughter” is the third in a series about Bear World. If interested in reading them in order, here’s the first post and the second.
Continue readingTouring Transactions of Bear World Cubs Through State & Federal Documentation What happens to Bear World cubs? In August of 2016, one Roger Kuhl lived up to his last name
Continue reading[March 2022 Addendum: Given Yellowstone Bear World’s continued disregard of Law And Order (see Animal Welfare Act 2.131 – Handling of Animals below) ScholarDay is pleased to announced that our
Continue readingYellowstone Bear World Allegedly Killed Bear Cubs: A Behind-the-Scenes Look Before Casey Anderson became famous with his captive brown bear Brutus in Nat Geo shows, he worked at Yellowstone Bear
Continue readingTo whom it may concern at Caribou-Targhee National Forest, I am writing with concerns about the current Environmental Assessment relating to the Kilgore Project. My concerns are about both the
Continue readingKilgore Project Proposal Recap Before jumping into our Kilgore Project Public Comment Guide, let’s clearly define what the proposal is. On July 22, 2020, Excellon Resources (EX), a Canadian mining
Continue readingIntroducing ScholarDay’s New Investigative Series: “Forest Service Says What?” Rewind to 2018 (oh how young we were!), the Forest Service invited us to submit how we felt about letting a
Continue readingArchived Campaign that Ended on Feb. 9, 2018. We have a more thorough and updated article for the 2021 Kilgore Project Proposal accepting comments through Feb 11, 2021. The Kilgore Project
Continue readingFrom Late June through July of 2017, Alex and I were engaged in a near-300-mile through-hike of eastern Idaho’s mountain ranges. We began at Biscuit Basin in Yellowstone National Park
Continue readingA Bear Dilemma, Clearly On the day of the above photograph, Eric and I had been backpacking 20 miles across the Continental Divide, up and down the ridgeline and
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