LIVING WITH GRIZZLIES PRESENTATION
Apr
14
12:30 PM12:30

LIVING WITH GRIZZLIES PRESENTATION

WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT GRIZZLY BEARS? Why they are here, What they do, and How to Coexist Safely? Join us for a FREE presentation that will answer those questions, and more!

Education Tables! Light Refreshments! Everyone Welcome!

For more information, visit: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/living-with-grizzlies-coexistence-ecology-behaviour-tickets-875488157647

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Spring Coexistence Workshops
Apr
13
9:00 AM09:00

Spring Coexistence Workshops

Spring is here! We’re here to help you get prepared with everything Garden and Bear related!

Join us at the N’Quatqua Community Garden for FREE workshops.

  • Learn how to install an Electric Fence

    • Sign up for an Electric Fence Cost Share Program

  • Learn how to properly use Bear Spray

    • Quick draw competition for prizes!

  • Seed sharing- getting you ready to sow

  • Composting- Make Soil Not Waste!

  • Learn to identify Invasive Plants and what to do about them

Location: 120 Casper Charlie Place, D’Arcy BC (Turn Left at the N’Quatqua Gas Station)

D’ARCY, DEVINE, BIRKEN COMMUNITIES, EVERYONE WELCOME! LIGHT LUNCH! GIVE AWAYS!

For more information, email us: Info@COASTtoCASCADES.org

In collaboration with:

N’Quatqua Health Station

Margo Supplies Ltd

Stewardship Pemberton Society

Squamish Lillooet Regional District

Sea to Sky Invasives Species Council



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Apr
27
to Apr 29

Grizzly Bear Safety & Electric Fencing Spring Workshops

Free Workshops with Gillian Sanders of Grizzly Bear Solutions.

Spring is when bears become active again. Whether you’re living, working, or recreating in Bear Country, being prepared for encounters includes knowing how to respond, how to be prepared, and how to avoid conflicts. Coexistence is possible and necessary for the safety of all.
The Pemberton area is home to Grizzly Bears. Join us in learning more about being prepared for bear season.
Everyone Welcome!


For more information about these workshops, send us an email: Jolene@COASTtoCASCADES.org


Brought to you by
The Coast to Cascades Grizzly Bear Initiative and The Grizzly Bear Foundation


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27TH 2022

What do you do if/when you encounter a bear? How do you prevent conflicts with bears? This and more will be answered!

This workshop is geared towards farmers, dog walkers, mountain bikers, hikers, hunters, campers, runners, berry pickers, birdwatchers, horseback riders, and anyone living, working, or recreating in grizzly bear habitat.

Grizzly Bear Safety Workshop is presented in partnership with the Pemberton & District Public Library.
Seating is limited, please register by clicking the button below:


THURSDAY, APRIL 28TH 2022

This workshop will benefit farmers, ranchers, homesteaders, and homeowners. Learn the basics, safety, and the solutions to protecting your property using a tried and tested tool. Onsite demonstrations and discussions.

No registration required. Bring yourself and a Friend!


FRIDAY, APRIL 29TH 2022

Electric Fencing Installation Training:

More in-depth Electric Fencing Training for those interested to learn how to design, plan, install, and maintain electric fencing. We will be visiting different sites to compare various tactics and gain tips and tricks from years of experience.

Light lunch provided.
——
Friday, April 29th
11 am - 2 pm
Pemberton Valley Farms
9302 Pemberton Meadows Road.


To sign up for the Electric Fence Installation Training, please email: Jolene@COASTtoCASCADES.org


For all Workshops:

  • Please do not attend if you are feeling unwell.

  • There are outdoor components

    • Dress appropriately for the weather.

    • Wear sturdy shoes.


About the presenter:
Gillian Sanders is the Coordinator of Grizzly Bear Solutions, based in the Kootenays. With 20 years field experience in grizzly bear conservation, Gillian works towards improving grizzly bear/human coexistence through education, collaboration, and use of practical tools.

Gillian has developed her own Electric Fencing Video, it is available on the Grizzly Bear Solutions YouTube channel.


Thank you to our host venues, our partners, and to you, for your continued support and interest!


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Dec
1
to Jan 31

2021 Environmental Action Calendars

Purchase your Keepsake Wall Calendars Today.

This holiday season, support the Association of Whistler Area Residents for the Environment and the Coast to Cascades Grizzly Bear Initiative as we work together to give nature and wildlife a voice.

Our organizations frequently work together to promote science-based research, provide education and embed positive stewardship in all our connections with nature.

Your support helps us undertake conservation projects for the preservation of the local environment and wildlife.

* Full of tips, important dates & inspiration for every eco citizen!

* Beautiful photographs by local photographer Joern Rohde

* Printed on eco friendly forest free paper

* Perfect gift for family, friends, colleagues, yourself

Order yours today at:

https://www.awarewhistler.org/2021-calendars/

(Limited supply, order now to be shipped before Christmas)

From all of us, we Thank you for your kind support and wish you the best of the Holidays!

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Jun
10
6:30 PM18:30

Getting To Know A Canadian Icon: The Grizzly Bear


JOIN US FOR A FREE ONLINE SESSION JAM PACKED WITH GRIZZLY BEAR FACTS.

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Grizzly bears are a fascinating and elusive presence for us here in the Sea to Sky corridor of British Columbia. Understanding more about the grizzly bear enables us to better protect their crucial habitats and to make sure that as we continue to grow and thrive, we enable them to do the same. The Coast to Cascades Grizzly Bear Initiative (C2C) has partnered with the Association of Whistler Area Residents for the Environment (AWARE) to gather, (virtually of course), some of BC’s leading grizzly bear researchers to share their knowledge and answer some of our favourite Frequently Asked Questions!

Over 90 minutes we will learn about grizzly bear biology, behaviours and habitats, as well as the research methods used to learn about grizzly bear populations. Part of the session will be dedicated to time to answer those weird and wonderful questions you might have about these icons of the wild.

Renowned bear researchers will share bear stories from the field and cover common questions including: 

  • What is the difference between a food conditioned bear and a habituated bear?

  • How effective is bear spray really?

  • Why can’t we just relocate ‘problem’ bears?

  • Why do grizzly bear recovery efforts focus heavily on females and cubs?

  • Why do bears like to scratch themselves on trees?

    AND MORE…..


Registration Details:

This is a FREE zoom webinar! Space is limited, register today!

Registration is required.  Once you’ve completed registration, you will receive an email with instructions on how to access the webinar. We look forward to you joining us.

Not able to join us? A recording of the event can be found here!


About the scientists:

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Dr. Lana Ciarniello is a Registered Professional Biologist, an Independent Research Scientist, and Co-Chair of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Bear Specialist’s Group’s Human-Bear Conflict Expert Team. Lana began research with bears in 1993 and has provided consulting services on the research and management of fish and wildlife to the government, NGOs, First Nations, other consulting firms, and industry since 1997. Lana’s previous projects have included radio-collaring bears to track their use of habitats, survival and reproduction and using non-invasive data gathering methods to monitor the effects of bear viewing tourism on bears. She is currently the research scientist leading the new Project Rewild that aims to examine the survival of captive-reared grizzly bears. Her research interests focus on the interaction of humans and bears, particularly as they relate to resource extraction industries. Her report, Reducing human-bear conflicts: solutions through better management of non-natural foods (Ciarniello 1997) pioneered the BC Bear Smart program. Lana believes in science-based management of bears. She uses temporal and spatial modeling to seek to explain urban encroachment into bear habitat, natural food shortages, and human-bear conflicts in relation to grizzly and black bear biological requirements.

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Dr. Bruce McLellan is a Wildlife Research Ecologist who has just begun his 43rd field season on a grizzly bear population in Southeast BC and his 15th season on another in Southwest BC, and has done research on 4 other populations as well.  Over the decades he has been involved with many land-use, access management, and recreation management processes and, with others, initiated the Bear Awareness Society in the mid 1990s that now evolved into Wildsafe BC.  Bruce was previously president of the International Association for Bear Research and Management, then Co-chair of the IUCN Bear Specialist Group, and now is the Redlist authority for this group.  More locally, he is the guy that puts the radio collars on the bears in the Squamish to Lillooet area. 

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Dr. Michael Proctor is an independent research scientist that runs the Trans-border Grizzly Bear Project in southeast BC. He has been a conservation-relevant researcher since 1995 who uses genetic analyses and GPS telemetry to study landscape genetics, fragmentation, connectivity, meta-population ecology, habitat use, population dynamics, ecological and food modeling, wildlife-conflict, and publishes his work in peer-reviewed journals. He also works to implement workable conservation solutions to threatened populations. He is the deputy-chair for the IUCN Bear Specialist Group (BSG), the co-chair for the IUCN BSG Asian Brown Bear Expert Team, the past vice-president of the International Bear Association, a member of the IUCN Connectivity Conservation Specialist Group, and a former boat builder, music instrument builder, and timber framer that dabbles as a bluegrass guitar flat picker and piano player. He works internationally on several research and conservation projects and lives on the shores of Kootenay Lake in Kaslo, BC where he is happily self-isolating. His latest endeavor was to initiate Kootenay Connect, evolving from large carnivore connectivity into the broader Ecological Corridors centered on riparian-wetland complexes.

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Dr. Michelle McLellan is an Independent Research Scientist and has worked on several bear research projects in BC, Alberta and Ecuador. For the last 15 years most of Michelle’s work has been focused on small and threatened grizzly bear populations in southwestern British Columbia. The goals of the Southwest BC Grizzly Bear Project are to understand the mechanisms of population change and identify opportunities for population recovery.  Michelle completed her undergraduate degree in biology at McGill University and her Ph.D. in New Zealand

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