By Stan Tekiela
After almost 10 years, I returned to one of my favorite places to film and photograph the largest land predator in the world. The only known animal to actively hunt people to eat. An animal so big that the adult males can weigh upwards of 1,500 pounds. That’s right, you read that correctly. I am talking about the Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus).
As I mentioned it has been almost 10 years since I last traveled to the sub-arctic to see and photograph Polar Bears. The last time I was there was in early winter and snow blanketed the ground, and the temperatures were well below zero. In fact, several mornings where -32 F. This time, I went in mid-September, and I was hoping to catch the tundra in its autumn splendor. I got lucky and hit the fall colors perfectly and to top it off the Polar Bears did not disappoint.
I flew into a remote area of northern Manitoba Canada, where I met up with a couple friends and a guide who was there to keep us from being eaten by a Polar Bear while we were busy operating the camera gear. The days were pleasant with scattered sun and a light breeze. Not good weather for Polar Bears, since they like the cold and snow.
But on the fourth day we woke to heavy clouds and a strong wind from the northeast. The day looked promising for a good Polar Bear encounter. We traveled many miles by off-road vehicle down rut ridden roads stopping at any good vantage point to get out and scout the area by binoculars. Just when we thought we might go a day without seeing a bear, we spotted what looked like a large white rock on the shore of the Hudson Bay.
We quickly set up our camera gear and tried to get comfortable. The wind was brutal, and we tried to hide behind a rock outcropping for some shelter, but nothing seemed to help with the wind. At this time of year, the Polar Bears are waiting for the ice to form on the Hudson Bay so they can move out onto the ice pack and hunt seals. This means the bears often sleep for several days before getting up and moving around but we were willing to wait it out and see how it goes. And this bear looked like a big male so we were willing to wait and see what happens.
A couple hours later the bear started to roll around on his back. His huge paws waving in the air as he rolled back and forth. Since he was in some short vegetation the images were not great. We whispered about how it would be amazing if the bear woke up and walked up onto a rock wall with the Hudson Bay in the background and then move over to an area where the autumn colors of the tundra would contrast perfectly with the white bear.