The Province

Bear necessitie­s

You can help pick Alaska park’s fattest bear. These superfans already have

- KARIN BRULLIARD

Brown bear 856 is an aggressive male suspected of being the father of bear 503, who as a cub was abandoned by his mother, bear 402, and then adopted by bear 435 Holly, who these days is so rotund that she appears to have multiple chins.

Most of those same bears are now rivals in a heated battle — over pudge, not power.

It is something like a soap opera, though one with a very short season. Over just a few warm months, its floofy cast appears after a long winter’s sleep and descends on Brooks Falls in Alaska’s Katmai National Park. There, the players scuffle for dominance, rear cubs, sometimes share spoils and — most important — grow comically, almost absurdly, fat on the world’s largest sockeye salmon run.

The bears become so mammoth that the park for five years has run an annual contest to name the most blubbery bear of all. Fat Bear Week, which began on Oct. 2, has a March Madness-style bracket and voting on Facebook, where the park provides before and after shots and an endless stream of fat puns. The bears can gain two pounds of fat a day funnelling fish ahead of hibernatio­n, resulting in some jaw-dropping physical transforma­tions.

But Fat Bear Week is only the gimmicky finale of a summer reality show watched obsessivel­y by a swelling stable of fans around the world. Explore.org, a philanthro­pic multimedia organizati­on, livestream­s a “bearcam” from several spots along the Brooks River. When it launched in 2012, it had about 20,000 unique sessions a day (that is, the number of times someone started watching it). Now it has about 80,000, making it the most popular of explore. org’s various webcams, said Courtney Johnson, the group’s social media director.

There is no shortage of live animal cams, but few offer the same breadth of characters. The park says dozens of bears, which aren’t typically social animals, regularly fish the falls. But because the park is remote and expensive to visit, few people see them in person. Bearcam watchers say the footage provides a mesmerizin­g view of bears as individual­s that must employ varying strategies to navigate a crowd and win the resources they need to survive.

“The huge part at Brooks Falls is socializin­g — figuring out how they fit into this society, and how not to step on toes and how to behave,” said Marsha Chez, a regular bearcam watcher from Aurora, Ore., who writes a tabloid-like newsletter on the bears’ antics. “So there’s a lot of social grace. They have really learned where they fit in.”

Ursine conflicts do occur, which participan­ts in the cam’s animated chat room discuss as though they were scenes from Downton Abbey. The chat has spawned meetup groups and even romances between regulars, Johnson said.

“Some people get really emotionall­y invested in one bear succeeding,” said Cat Yurkovich, who always has the bearcam running on one of the two computer monitors she uses for her administra­tive job at Southern Illinois University Edwardsvil­le. “Some keep Excel spreadshee­ts on when certain bears return and when they’re last seen. People get really into data.”

Yurkovich is more interested in the bears’ fishing tactics and the science of it all — a topic “not extremely popular” in the chat, which she helps moderate.

Passions sometimes run high. This summer, she said, “there was a lot of vitriol” in the chat about park visitors getting too close to bears. Other chatters despise bear 856 — who has been implicated in the death of a cub — and want him removed from the scene.

“That’s when I kind of have to step in and say, ‘This is the science behind it and this is why he’s doing what he’s doing, and it’s why he’s the dominant bear,’” Yurkovich said. “He’s not a bad bear.”

But regulars say usually things stay civil, even lovely. Chez, an artist, said she misses the bearcam terribly when it’s off for hibernatio­n. Once it revs up in June, it’s always on at her home office, and she starts churning out her Brooks River Tattler-er, an online publicatio­n she described as “gossip from the bears’ point of view.”

Chez and about 10 other bearcam aficionado­s have met twice in the Portland area over beers, burgers and bear talk.

“It’s just — we’ve fallen in love,” she said. “It’s a bizarre thing. I don’t understand it. I never thought I’d be watching bears. Ever, ever, ever. But now I can’t take my eyes off them.”

Although she is a full-time devotee, Chez said she finds Fat Bear Week thrilling. So do others: Fans make digital “posters” for their favourite fatsos, “the same way you would in an election in high school,” she said. Because she is editor of the unofficial bear news, Chez produces posters for all candidates. But she does not hesitate to say she’s rooting for bear 747, an animal she said “gets along with almost everybody” and is “humongous.”

“My bears usually don’t win,” she said. “This year I think I’m going for a sure thing.”

Mike Fitz, a former Katmai park ranger who is now an explore.org naturalist, has also endorsed 747 (whose number, the park insists, was randomly assigned, despite his similarity to a jumbo jet).

Yurkovich’s pick for the contest is 435 Holly, who is known for her smarts, and for depositing her cubs in a tree at a campsite so she can nap.

Holly is also known for — there is no delicate way to say this — her big butt.

 ??  ?? Brown bear 435 Holly’s remarkable expansion from summer, left, has made her a strong contender in the park’s Fat Bear Week contest.
Brown bear 435 Holly’s remarkable expansion from summer, left, has made her a strong contender in the park’s Fat Bear Week contest.
 ??  ?? Brown Bear 747, who dines on sockeye salmon at Brooks Falls in Alaska’s Katmai National Park, is a favourite in the park’s annual Fat Bear Week.
Brown Bear 747, who dines on sockeye salmon at Brooks Falls in Alaska’s Katmai National Park, is a favourite in the park’s annual Fat Bear Week.

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