This is a grizzly cub taken from the viewing platform up Knight Inlet. This cub appears to be posing for the camera.
Grizzly Bear and Wildlife Tour Blog
We offer an exceptional fly-in lodge for Grizzly Bear Watching and Whale Watching in British Columbia.
Learn about What’s happening at the Lodge, view our British Columbia’s Wildlife Report, read our Grizzly Bear Watching Blog and Whale Watching Blog. Learn more about a Day on the River Blog, see Our Tour Guide’s Photos & Blog and Photos from Our Guests.
Black Bear Cub Standing
Bald Eagle Taking Off
Glendale River Estuary Grizzly Viewing
Black Bear Feeding
Grizzly Bear from the Dock
This picture was taken from the dock that we park at when conducting grizzly bear tours in Glendale Cove, Knight Inlet. We explore the cove by small boat looking for bears, but sometimes we get lucky and they come to us.
Grizzly Bear “Andy”
Bald Eagle with an Unlikely Catch
Grizzly Mother Sharing her Catch
Guests are often a little confused when they see a mother grizzly catch a salmon and not share with her young cubs. She does this for two reasons. Although the mother is nursing these cubs it is in everyone’s best interest for them to learn to catch their own fish and feed independently. Secondly because the mother is nursing these cubs she needs to consume a lot of calories to maintain this and must be a little selfish at times.
Grizzly Bear “Disagreements”
Grizzly Bears are a solitary animals. Mothers and cubs are together and sometimes siblings will stay together for a couple of years after they have been kicked out on their own. Other then this they are looking out for themselves. With the abundance of salmon in the rivers in the fall the Grizzlies learn to tolerate each other because they all have to eat. There are, however disputes over the prime fish areas. Generally these aren’t much more then a stare down and some growling, but they do occasionally end up in a bit of a scrap.









