The pilots where I work actually see more Grizzlies on the Alberta side of the border in the border region, I presume due to no season/draw, the terrain is identical. Just be cautious David, by your own admission Alberta is a place you are not familiar with, and there are far more Grizzlies there than the rah rah BC crowd would care to admit (I was shamelessly one before getting to know Alberta well).
BC by nearly every environmental department's own admission is light years behind Alberta on enforcement and so forth, likely because we have less funding. The BC Oil & Gas Commission is largely ex-Forestry guys who often don't seem to know what they're looking at, unbelievable stuff passes. The Albertan equivalent holds much sharper pencils and teeth as one example. The Albertan sites are as a general rule cleaner as well than BC, I see a lot more spills etc on our side. Alberta has put aside more of its Grizzly habitat by percentage than BC by a hugefold, as well. Yes, BC has far greater habitat and putting aside an equal proportion would likely be not feasible, but it is an interesting characteristic as well.
Lastly, don't buy all the propaganda and anti-Alberta BS you hear on the news. The vast majority of Alberta is intact wilderness no different than BC with its gazillion forest service, mining, and recreation trails. I just note an extremist tone, and a lack of personal experience in the region, in your posts and one must always be wary when they enter that territory.

I've been there myself only to stand smartly corrected! Finally, lets not forget BC itself had closed its Grizzly hunt just a decade ago.
