Kind of a limp wrister piece but I'm sure a few people will be salivating over this article. 
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/archives/sunnews/canada/2013/08/20130821-205835.html
http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/archives/sunnews/canada/2013/08/20130821-205835.html
He's a 600-pound serial killer, standing nearly 7-feet tall and wielding an arsenal of weapons capable of ripping victims apart in seconds.
Luckily, his taste is for black bear meat -- even if that technically makes this backwoods brute something of a cannibal, being a member of Ursus genus himself.
Meet grizzly No. 122: one of the largest carnivores known to roam the forests of Banff National Park, and now a proven repeat killer of black bears.
"I'd say that's exactly what happened -- there's evidence on the site that the black bear was foraging on the edge of the trail, prior to being consumed by this grizzly bear," said Steve Michel, a human/wildlife conflict specialist with Banff National Park.
"It looks like a situation where the black bear was in the wrong place at the wrong time as a much, much larger grizzly bear came by."
The black bear was taken by surprise on the Sundance trail near the Cave and Basin National Historic Site, and Michel said it wouldn't have been much of a fight.
About five-times larger than his victim, No. 122 would have made short work of the smaller bruin, likely using his powerful jaws to end the struggle.
"He's a very large male grizzly bear, and definitely the dominant grizzly bear on the landscape -- the black bear was not very large in comparison; we're speculating, but based on paw size and skull size it was about 100 to 150 pounds," said Michel.
"We're talking quite a size differential. It would not have been a substantial struggle."
The feast took two days, and resulted in the entire black bear being consumed by the hungry grizzly.
In the meantime, the bloody teddy bear's picnic forced officials to close popular hiking trails around the Sundance Canyon area, waiting for the radio-collared grizzly to move out of the area -- the trails reopened Wednesday, with No. 122 now moved on.
Michel says a grizzly eating a kill is perfectly natural behaviour, but also a very dangerous situation for anyone disturbing the highly territorial bears.
In 14 years of park patrol, Michel says he's only dealt with four cases of bear-on-bear predation -- and two of those involve No. 122.
"I suspect it's going on in the background on a regular basis, at least a couple of times a year, but without radio collars to show us stumbling across a kill like this would be like finding a needle in a haystack," said Michel.





















































