No matter where you live in Canada, there are usually wild critters nearby.
A few years ago, I bought a farm about 40 minutes from downtown Toronto, soon realizing it was also home to rabbits, raccoons, foxes, coyotes, herds of deer and the occasional Lynx or Bobcat.
Bears regularly rooted through the garbage in nearby towns, much like the one discovered yesterday in a Vancouver dumpster usually home to junkies and disowned NHL Goalies.
The bear was quickly tranquillized and transported to the relative safety of the Squamish Valley.
From the reactions of the crowd in the above video, you can tell that many Canadians have a warm spot for the animals that surround us.
Like all those who live in proximity to wildlife, we tend not to anthropomorphize them. But we also seem more aware that they’re sentient creatures as unsure of us as we are of them, but with similar needs and frailties.
Which brings me to a story that occurred a little further up the rainy West coast.
Fisherman Tom Satre, of Sitka, Alaska, was out with a charter group when the four black-tailed deer pictured at the top of this post swam to his boat and began circling it.
Satre realized they were tired and cold and likely had been in the frigid water for some time. He and his charter group immediately hauled them aboard.
The deer collapsed on the deck as Satre turned his boat for shore.
According to Satre, “Once we reached the dock, the first
buck we pulled from the water hopped onto the dock, looked back as if to say 'thank you' and disappeared into the forest.”
With a little help, the others followed, leaving everyone aboard with the impression that animals normally terrified of people had realized people were their only hope for survival when they got into trouble.
It’s an impression more of us should work at fostering.