
You Can Help Keep Bears Wild!
Black bears in Colorado are entering hyperphagia and will spend up to 20 hours a day trying to fatten up for winter.
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Black bears in Colorado are entering hyperphagia and will spend up to 20 hours a day trying to fatten up for winter.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife asks residents to remove attractants and to help reduce bear conflicts during the fall season.
Bears are part of the wild places that make Colorado special, so we ask people to follow some easy steps that will help keep our bears wild – Be Bear Aware!
Eight orphaned bear cubs are now sleeping peacefully on Pikes Peak, snug inside artificial dens.
Every time we’re forced to destroy a bear, it’s not just the bear that loses. We all lose a little piece of the wildness that makes Colorado so special.
The enormous variety of wildlife is one of the primary reasons Colorado is such a great place to live and recreate.
Colorado Outdoors, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s magazine, features a wealth of information for hunters, anglers and outdoors enthusiasts.