Your hunting trip just cost a grizzly bear its life
Good morning from the coulees — the wind's up, the sky's wide, and Lethbridge has something to say.
Look, you hear about a lot of things out here on the prairie. Sometimes it’s the wind knocking down another fence post, sometimes it’s the Pronghorn men’s basketball team making an unexpected run. But today, the story that really sticks in your craw is the news about a grizzly bear, found dead last November with a gunshot wound. Alberta Fish and Wildlife Enforcement Services are looking for answers, and they're leaning on the public for help through their "Report A Poacher" program. This isn't just some abstract wildlife issue; this bear was out there, living in the same big sky country we all do, and someone decided it was their right to end that.
### Our Shared Wild Spaces
This isn't just about one animal. It's about what we value in this province, and especially out here in the southern part where the foothills start to wrinkle into the mountains. Grizzlies, or *kodi* as my Blackfoot relatives would say, are an important part of the ecosystem, and their presence speaks to the health of the land. When one is found like this, it feels like a wound to the whole landscape. It makes you wonder about the kind of person who would do such a thing and then just leave it.
* **The Investigation:** Fish and Wildlife are actively seeking information.
* **The Crime:** A grizzly bear was found shot, likely poached.
* **How to Help:** Tips can be made anonymously through the Report A Poacher program.
For folks in Lethbridge, who often head west on the Crowsnest Trail for a hike in the mountains or a drive through the national parks, this kind of news hits different. We live with the coulees cutting right through our city, a wild space woven into our daily lives. It’s a constant reminder that we share this land with more than just each other. Protecting these creatures and their habitat isn't just for the folks up in Edmonton or Calgary; it's something that defines our local character and our respect for the land itself.
Jolene Blackwater, MiTL Sports Desk, Lethbridge.
The crew on the Morning Wire always has a take on this kind of thing — catch them live at mornings.live.