The Columbus Dispatch

Cash coming to Tahoe animal center

It’s where burned cub tunneled back to the wild

- Scott Sonner

RENO, Nev. – Private donors’ new pledge to match $500,000 in contributi­ons for a $1 million-expansion at a Lake Tahoe wildlife rescue center is bringing smiles back to staff and volunteers, who have been on an emotional rollercoas­ter since a bear cub being treated for severe wildfire burns made a much-publicized escape this summer.

The Lake Tahoe Wildlife Center has been making repairs directed by California regulators since Tamarack – named after the wildfire that blazed across more than 100 square miles (259 square kilometers) in the Sierra and severely burned the cub’s paws – tunneled under an electric fence and fled back to the wild.

It was the first escape in the 45-yearhistor­y of the center in South Lake Tahoe, California.

Two days later, volunteers spotted and photograph­ed a cub clinging to a tree 40 feet (12 meters) up in a nearby forest. They became convinced it was the 6month-old escapee, decided to leave him alone and now believe he’s doing just fine.

The contributi­on the Bentley Foundation and MH Buckeye announced this week may just be the happy ending they’ve been looking for.

“We’ve turned the corner,” center spokesman Greg Erfani told The Associated Press. As of Wednesday, they were only $180,000 short of the $1.05 million needed to begin constructi­on in the spring and finish by the end of 2022.

“It’s going to build the first animal hospital in the Lake Tahoe area,” he said.

The center has continued to rescue smaller animals and recently released seven rehabilita­ted coyote pups. But it’s been prohibited from accepting big game including bears since the California Department of Fish and Wildlife declared in October that it had to make improvemen­ts to its enclosures and fencing.

“Upon completion, CDFW will perform a site inspection and evaluate (the center’s) request to renew its agreement to temporaril­y possess and rehabilita­te injured and orphaned black bear cubs,” department spokesman Peter Tira said in an email to AP on Wednesday.

Erfani said supply-chain challenges have delayed immediate repairs but the center should be fully up and running by next month, bears and all.

The expansion includes the hospital with two large recovery rooms, surgery and X-ray areas, individual care buildings for different species and a small dormitory for staff providing round-theclock care – all at the place young Tamarack briefly called home.

The tale of his rescue-turned-escape began July 26 when a homeowner in Markleevil­le, California, spotted the cub crawling on his knees because his paws were so badly burned.

Photos of the bandaged black bear at the rescue center flooded social media and drew mention in internatio­nal news coverage of the devastatin­g fire that forced thousands of evacuation­s.

“Tamarack was sort of the first ‘feel good’ story that came out of the fire. It was all destructio­n and heartbreak, and then there’s this little guy that had survived,” Erfani said this week. “Then, of course, that little stinker was not going to be caged. He just wanted out.”

The center announced his escape Aug. 3, warning anyone who spotted him to stay away and report sightings to wildlife officials.

Another flurry of publicity followed, less flattering than before.

“We got lambasted on social media. People were being nasty,” Erfani recalled. “It was very emotional for us because we had connection­s with him. A lot of people were really upset.”

Meanwhile, the center was doing everything it could to corral the cub, even sending up heat-seeking drones sometimes used to find lost hikers, Erfani said. “We spent a lot of time and money trying to find him. Our fear was that he wouldn’t be able to survive, so we didn’t give up.”

It paid off with the sighting of the cub clinging to the tree.

“We could tell he had all the same markings. But he appeared safe, and once released into the wild, we don’t bring them back,” he said.

“He wasn’t happy being contained, pacing a lot. So, when we got him to a point where he could climb, that’s all he really needed. Once he got that defense … his instincts kick in.”

Tamarack wasn’t like older bears who – because of issues including droughtdri­ven food shortages – abandon the woods to rummage through garbage and sometimes break into Lake Tahoe homes.

“They become ‘urban’ bears,” Erfani said. “Until the fire, (Tamarack) was from the backcountr­y, out in the wild. He never saw a house, never saw a car.”

“We like to believe he’s out there now in the wild, living the bear’s life.”

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