Probably neither here nor there, but twenty years or so ago, I had the privilege to visit my Great-Uncle Nestor, by myself, as an adult, for the first time in my life...
As Uncle Nestor was showing me around his place I saw an old-timey black and white picture of a very young Nestor and his father... taken some time in the 30's.
Between Great Uncle Nestor and Great Great Grandfather Karpiak was a SIZEABLE bear head. I made a passing comment and Uncle Nestor replied that it was a "brown bear" that had wandered onto the family farm near Ethelbert, Manitoba.
I said that where I come from (BC) we called those "brown bears", grizzlies. It was most certainly a grizzly in that old photo...
So he told me the story of how one day, while out in the field, one of Great Great Grandfather Karpiak's team of draft horses died... and he had to go to the next farm to borrow their team to drag this off of the field.
Apparently there was a bounty on coyotes at the time, and Great Great Grandfather Karpiak dragged the dead horse over to a slough where he had had good luck in shooting coyotes previously.
A day or two after he drug it to the slough he rode out on his bicycle with his .22 to make a little extra coyote money and found that this HUGE draft horse had been dragged into the surrounding scrub!!
He hopped back on his bicycle and ski-daddled over to another farm to borrow a .30-30 from his neighbor.
Those Old Skool Ukrainians really took care of each other.
Anyway, he went and shot this "brown bear" by himself with that .30-30.
My Baba confirmed this story, telling me that there were fires up north that year that pushed "weird animals" south onto the homestead.
Great Great Grandfather Karpiak then skinned the bear and had the HBC tan it... my Baba said that the tanned hide was big enough to cover their entire winter sleigh... a skinner, she might have called it...?
Great Uncle Nestor has long since passed and that old-timey photograph has been lost, but I believe that that bear may have been one of the last prairie grizzlies in Manitoba.
We grew up in the East Kootenays and had bears, black and grizzly, literally in our back yards and never had any problems with them... they're not bloodthirsty or evil... they're just bears and need to be given the respect, and berth, that they require to live.
I would welcome seeing them back in more places, for sure.
Just my two cents.