The colors are so beautiful in this video. My brother has photograhed many a grizzly as that is his job. He always has a gripping grizzly story. You have given me a glimpse into his life. Thank you.
Even though pack trips are a lot of fun, nothing beats exploring on foot. Right, you are that many people walk right past most wildlife. I spent almost two years with a Mandan Indian when I was a young teen learning tracking and hunting. What a wonderful amazing education that I will always cherish. He was so in tune with nature that he almost never walked past a wild animal. He just sensed that something was there. I am just getting back into looking for Grizzlies and coastal wolves here in BC.
That would be a great education. I always wonder how many animals I walk right by and not notice. I think there is no way to know. I have not figured out a way to try to calculate that. But I know I do walk by grizzlies and not see them. I have several instances in my videos where I walked right by bears, turned around to look, and there is a bear!
Stan Mills yes I have been bingeing! Just discovered your videos a week or so ago and you have completely changed my perception of Yellowstone. Otherwise I was always seeing people queued up in their cars on the main road as the bison walked by. And then to have your view, where you hike off into the nether of the Park and (so far for me) you have only seen humans 3 times! That’s remarkable. I’m inclined to give it a try. Nice job, seriously 😃
Hi Stan, I really enjoy your videos, just strolling along, watching the wildlife and the beauty of nature. Seeing the horse riders, would the bears chase people on horseback? Safe travels!
Well, you definitely are a bad influence on me. Now I have to buy a superzoom camera and make room in my backpacking schedule for a trip or two into the Yellowstone ecosystem, Thanks a lot! Seriously though, thank you for opening up my eyes to a new way of hiking and giving me the confidence to try it. I guess you can teach an old dog new tricks. Now for a question. Have you ever seen an interaction between a black bear and a grizzly? I thought the third black bear's immediate reaction to seeing the other two black bears might have been because he didn't immediately know if they were black bears or grizzlies.
Do you hike that from 191 or do you drive up the gravel road to a trail head. Think the road I’m thinking of is called TeePee creak road maybe? I can’t remember. I have never gone up that road on the edge of the paek
Those tourists on horseback are right where they oughta be. Few would know how to behave - people would shout, There's a Bear!! and some idiot would try to chase it.
Thank you so much for your videos, sir. Your channel deserves much more subscribers....but I guess “people” prefer noisy trash and stupidity over the quiet beauty of nature
Great video, Thanks for sharing. Side note: I can tell your not a westerner. Forest is called Timber, as in "the Elk were bedded in the Timber." Dude strings are called dude strings for a reason. They are vacationers from all over the world and the only way they will experience the wilderness is with a wrangler/guide and on a dude horse. Tourists are noisy and chatter incessantly on the trail and off. Probably because they're nervous about being out of their natural element and in the wild. My horse can hear them coming before I do and a long way off so you can bet the game do the same. Horseman, Packers and such rarely speak on the trail unless it's necessary, it's usually a quiet peaceful ride. Side note: Your doing exactly what Horn hunters do in the spring and what big game hunters do in the fall when they get nailed. Just saying. Don't take what your doing lightly. Case closed in fatal griz attack www.jhnewsandguide.com/news/environmental/article_c17c97cb-c2f0-5476-aa08-17301f75343d.html?fbclid=IwAR02Ll6MP-NbFZAJSW0f-PA-YOIteOLk2cTUPCSq-gxCjj5sa5k7NwMB36Q#.com&Fnewsl etters%2Fheadlines%2F%3F-dc%3D1548862204& Hunter airlifted to EIRMC after grizzly bear attack An adult grizzly bear, similar to the one pictured here, attacked and injured a man in Wyoming on Monday morning. The man sustained severe injuries and was airlifted to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls. idahostatejournal.com/outdoors/xtreme_idaho/hunter-airlifted-to-eirmc-after-grizzly-bear-attack/article_18c18ffd-4136-5b70-a21a-a6301d26e059.html FWP is investigating the Sept. 24 attack, which took place in the Twin Creek area flatheadbeacon.com/2017/09/26/bear-attacks-hunter-following-surprise-encounter/ Grizzly bear with cubs mauls hunter twice in surprise attack www.adventuresportsnetwork.com/wildlife/grizzly-bear-cubs-mauls-hunter-twice-surprise-attack/ Man recovering after being attacked twice by grizzly bear . www.clickorlando.com/news/man-recovering-after-being-attacked-twice-by-grizzly-bear Cody area man hospitalized after grizzly bear attack Specialists with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department begin efforts Thursday morning to trap a grizzly bear that attacked a man southwest of Cody, Wyoming. (Ruffin Prevost/Yellowstone Gate) www.yellowstonegate.com/2013/06/cody-man-hospitalized-after-grizzly-bear-attack/ Bears behaving badly: Park County commissioner Lee Livingston said one guide and two hunters with his Cody-based Livingston Outfitting and their horses were charged by a bear while they were hauling a dead elk during a guided hunt. www.codyenterprise.com/news/local/article_21249810-c747-11e8-8f14-e3b0f7b94dd7.html Oct. 15, 2018 The sagebrush was 6 to 8 feet tall - like navigating a corn maze. Darkness had not completely lifted and it was snowing heavily in the country north of Yellowstone National Park. Upon hearing an elk bugle some 100 to 150 yards away, seasoned hunters Bob Legasa, of Hayden, and Greg Gibson, of Sandpoint, headed toward a prominent tree. They sought a clearing to spot the elk they had scouted the day before.Instead, they were met with the growl of a big grizzly bear cub. About 500 pounds of mother bear wasn’t far behind. www.spokesman.com/stories/2018/oct/15/man-survives-grizzly-bear-attack-in-montana-wilder/ Report on the Soda Butte Bear Attacks Released Aug 16th 2010 A grizzly bear consumed a "significant portion" of the torso of a Michigan man fatally mauled by the grizzly last month, according to a 70-page U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service report released today. The report speculates that the events slowly escalated from the first attack, where the bear fled after being punched, to serious injury to a Canadian woman's arm, to the fatal mauling. Two other people were injured the same morning at at Cooke City-area campground by the same bear, a grizzly sow with three yearling cubs. The sow was euthanized and the cubs are now housed at ZooMontana in Billings. billingsgazette.com/lifestyles/recreation/gazoutdoors/report-on-soda-butte-bear-attacks-released/article_0ac61d84-a971-11df-a684-001cc4c002e0.html Here is a listing of the other 11 bear-caused fatalities in Montana and Wyoming over the past 30 years. June 17, 2010 - Erwin Frank Evert, 70, was mauled by a grizzly bear in the Kitty Creek Drainage area of the Shoshone National Forest, just east of Yellowstone National Park. The bear was trapped and tranquilized hours before, as part of a Grizzly Bear research team. Later, the bear was shot and killed from a helicopter by wildlife officials Oct. 30, 2001 - Timothy Hilston, 50, brown bear attacked and killed the elk hunter as he was gutting an elk in the Clearwater Wildlife Management Area of Western Montana. May 17, 1998 - Craig Dahl, 26, last seen alive hiking in the Two Medicine area of Glacier National Park. His partially consumed remains were found three days later. Oct. 3, 1992 - John Petranyi, 40, attacked and killed by a female grizzly with two cubs on the Loop Trail, Upper McDonald Valley, Glacier National Park. Sept. 1, 1987 - Gary Goeden, 29, was missing since July 28, 1987. His partially consumed remains were found at Natahki Lake, Many Glacier Valley, Glacier National Park. April 25, 1987 - Charles Gibbs, 40, was last seen alive following and photographing a female with cubs at Elk Mountain in Glacier National Park. Investigators recovered film of the female approaching in attack mode at 50 yards. October 1986 - William Tesinsky, 38, photographer, was mauled after approaching an adult female in the Otter Creek area of Hayden Valley, Yellowstone National Park. July 1984 - Brigitta Fredenhagen, 25, dragged from a tent during the night and killed at a backcountry campsite at the southern end of White Lake in Yellowstone National Park. June 1983 - Roger May, 23, dragged from a tent during the night and killed at the Rainbow Point campground in the Gallatin National Forest. July 24, 1980 - Jane Ammerman, Kim Eberly, both 19, attacked and killed by a grizzly during the night at their campsite at Divide Creek in the St. Mary valley, Glacier National Park. Sept. 30, 1980 - Laurence Gordon, 33, attacked and killed at the Elizabeth Lake campsite in the Belly River valley at Glacier National Park.
Wyoming Horseman, Thank you for taking the time to provide all the information that you do in your comments. I hope people take the time to read them. I don't have that much traffic on my channel but your opinions and information are appreciated. Thank you
@@StanMills I thought you would like this. I met this fellow at Turpin Meadow when he was on this trip. Really a nice young man. With Horses' Help, Army Veteran Finds Healing in Yellowstone | National Geographic ruclips.net/video/Z_5kQgErF5A/видео.html
2019 stan films 3 wolfs - now WATCH This video introducing wolves from Canada back into yellowstone parks ruclips.net/video/YybY5sEeZUU/видео.html great video🏆👌
some post in youtube🐻 use dogs to chase bears up trees and walk up shoot the poor little fellas They call that hunting Cowards if you ask me i was hoping the bear would shit all over them below 😂Been watching this guy Stan Mills Videos hike around yellowstone national park👌🏆 and after 30 50 videos not many Wildlife about hes seen 30 bears if that 3-5 wolves Guess usa has shot the fook out everything it aint what we used to see on TV in 70s from Australia pretty sad they Finally put the bear on the endagered list 2018 a bit late if you ask me Best if Hunters stick to Shooting Ferals Pigs DEER etc so many about there out of control in australia also the same camels foxes pigs deer cane toads etc _______🚜___🌾🌾🌾___🦘_
I’ve hunted & killed a lot of bear over the 55 years I’ve live in Montana & Just so you know, bear have bad vision when looking at longer distances, so at the end of your video when you said they should see you at 300 yds., usually they won’t unless you’re moving A LOT. They have a nose that are 5-7 times better than a bloodhound when it comes to picking up scent but they have bad nearsightedness.
dzjc01 Good one! Ha ha. I know this might shock you, but MANY people have to hunt in order to eat, even in this country & I just happened to be one of those people, but maybe you just don’t understand that because you don’t eat meat & or you’re not originally from Montana. Typical liberal
Just now watching this 2024. Great video!!! Thank you!
Great video , thx for sharing video best regards from Canada! 👍💕🍷🐻🍁👌
The colors are so beautiful in this video. My brother has photograhed many a grizzly as that is his job. He always has a gripping grizzly story. You have given me a glimpse into his life. Thank you.
Even though pack trips are a lot of fun, nothing beats exploring on foot. Right, you are that many people walk right past most wildlife. I spent almost two years with a Mandan Indian when I was a young teen learning tracking and hunting. What a wonderful amazing education that I will always cherish. He was so in tune with nature that he almost never walked past a wild animal. He just sensed that something was there. I am just getting back into looking for Grizzlies and coastal wolves here in BC.
That would be a great education. I always wonder how many animals I walk right by and not notice. I think there is no way to know. I have not figured out a way to try to calculate that. But I know I do walk by grizzlies and not see them. I have several instances in my videos where I walked right by bears, turned around to look, and there is a bear!
Have you seen grizzlies and coastal wolves?
Another Awesome video from Stan! With much gratitude, Be safe young man!
Thanks for the beautiful Hikes you share with us.
Thanks for the trip. That was fun. Definitely get the advantage to not having the multiple horse posse. You kinda blend in on foot. Nice 👍
Jim, you must be doing a video marathon. I have see a ton of comments from you. Thank you very much for your interest and your comments.
Stan Mills
yes I have been bingeing! Just discovered your videos a week or so ago and you have completely changed my perception of Yellowstone. Otherwise I was always seeing people queued up in their cars on the main road as the bison walked by. And then to have your view, where you hike off into the nether of the Park and (so far for me) you have only seen humans 3 times! That’s remarkable. I’m inclined to give it a try. Nice job, seriously 😃
Really enjoyed this! You have so much experience to share! I definitely want to hike with you! Thanks for taking us along!
Awesome video Stan! I was a little worried about your situation with the bears. Be safe.
Hi Stan, I really enjoy your videos, just strolling along, watching the wildlife and the beauty of nature. Seeing the horse riders, would the bears chase people on horseback? Safe travels!
Well, you definitely are a bad influence on me. Now I have to buy a superzoom camera and make room in my backpacking schedule for a trip or two into the Yellowstone ecosystem, Thanks a lot! Seriously though, thank you for opening up my eyes to a new way of hiking and giving me the confidence to try it. I guess you can teach an old dog new tricks. Now for a question. Have you ever seen an interaction between a black bear and a grizzly? I thought the third black bear's immediate reaction to seeing the other two black bears might have been because he didn't immediately know if they were black bears or grizzlies.
Beautiful scenery interesting subject
Adventure and suspense in the wilderness, very nice.
8:14 I see 2 grizzlies (as you were zooming in)
Another educational video. There is nothing like hiking in Yellowstone.
Do you hike that from 191 or do you drive up the gravel road to a trail head. Think the road I’m thinking of is called TeePee creak road maybe? I can’t remember. I have never gone up that road on the edge of the paek
The trailhead is right on 191. The trail is about 1/2 mile before you enter the park on 191.
Yeah, 150 yards is too close for me. Way too close. Where did the second bear come from? Holy buckets!😧
Bear bells? Spray? Never a problem.
Ur videos are cool
I didn't know the normal behavior of grizzlies is to run from humans?
Whoa!!!
I never seen a bear in the wild but it would be scary...What do u do if u see on?
I'm like you. How many animals have I walked by with them looking at me?
You look somewhat like a grizzly yourself, with your rain poncho over your backpack.
You are a Bear Magnet…..
Those tourists on horseback are right where they oughta be. Few would know how to behave - people would shout, There's a Bear!! and some idiot would try to chase it.
Thank you so much for your videos, sir.
Your channel deserves much more subscribers....but I guess “people” prefer noisy trash and stupidity over the quiet beauty of nature
Great video, Thanks for sharing.
Side note: I can tell your not a westerner. Forest is called Timber, as in "the Elk were bedded in the Timber."
Dude strings are called dude strings for a reason. They are vacationers from all over the world and the only way they will experience the wilderness is with a wrangler/guide and on a dude horse.
Tourists are noisy and chatter incessantly on the trail and off. Probably because they're nervous about being out of their natural element and in the wild. My horse can hear them coming before I do and a long way off so you can bet the game do the same.
Horseman, Packers and such rarely speak on the trail unless it's necessary, it's usually a quiet peaceful ride.
Side note: Your doing exactly what Horn hunters do in the spring and what big game hunters do in the fall when they get nailed.
Just saying. Don't take what your doing lightly.
Case closed in fatal griz attack
www.jhnewsandguide.com/news/environmental/article_c17c97cb-c2f0-5476-aa08-17301f75343d.html?fbclid=IwAR02Ll6MP-NbFZAJSW0f-PA-YOIteOLk2cTUPCSq-gxCjj5sa5k7NwMB36Q#.com&Fnewsl
etters%2Fheadlines%2F%3F-dc%3D1548862204&
Hunter airlifted to EIRMC after grizzly bear attack
An adult grizzly bear, similar to the one pictured here, attacked and injured a man in Wyoming on Monday morning. The man sustained severe injuries and was airlifted to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls.
idahostatejournal.com/outdoors/xtreme_idaho/hunter-airlifted-to-eirmc-after-grizzly-bear-attack/article_18c18ffd-4136-5b70-a21a-a6301d26e059.html
FWP is investigating the Sept. 24 attack, which took place in the Twin Creek area
flatheadbeacon.com/2017/09/26/bear-attacks-hunter-following-surprise-encounter/
Grizzly bear with cubs mauls hunter twice in surprise attack
www.adventuresportsnetwork.com/wildlife/grizzly-bear-cubs-mauls-hunter-twice-surprise-attack/
Man recovering after being attacked twice by grizzly bear
. www.clickorlando.com/news/man-recovering-after-being-attacked-twice-by-grizzly-bear
Cody area man hospitalized after grizzly bear attack
Specialists with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department begin efforts Thursday morning to trap a grizzly bear that attacked a man southwest of Cody, Wyoming. (Ruffin Prevost/Yellowstone Gate)
www.yellowstonegate.com/2013/06/cody-man-hospitalized-after-grizzly-bear-attack/
Bears behaving badly:
Park County commissioner Lee Livingston said one guide and two hunters with his Cody-based Livingston Outfitting and their horses were charged by a bear while they were hauling a dead elk during a guided hunt.
www.codyenterprise.com/news/local/article_21249810-c747-11e8-8f14-e3b0f7b94dd7.html
Oct. 15, 2018
The sagebrush was 6 to 8 feet tall - like navigating a corn maze. Darkness had not completely lifted and it was snowing heavily in the country north of Yellowstone National Park. Upon hearing an elk bugle some 100 to 150 yards away, seasoned hunters Bob Legasa, of Hayden, and Greg Gibson, of Sandpoint, headed toward a prominent tree. They sought a clearing to spot the elk they had scouted the day before.Instead, they were met with the growl of a big grizzly bear cub. About 500 pounds of mother bear wasn’t far behind. www.spokesman.com/stories/2018/oct/15/man-survives-grizzly-bear-attack-in-montana-wilder/
Report on the Soda Butte Bear Attacks Released Aug 16th 2010
A grizzly bear consumed a "significant portion" of the torso of a Michigan man fatally mauled by the grizzly last month, according to a 70-page U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service report released today.
The report speculates that the events slowly escalated from the first attack, where the bear fled after being punched, to serious injury to a Canadian woman's arm, to the fatal mauling.
Two other people were injured the same morning at at Cooke City-area campground by the same bear, a grizzly sow with three yearling cubs. The sow was euthanized and the cubs are now housed at ZooMontana in Billings.
billingsgazette.com/lifestyles/recreation/gazoutdoors/report-on-soda-butte-bear-attacks-released/article_0ac61d84-a971-11df-a684-001cc4c002e0.html
Here is a listing of the other 11 bear-caused fatalities in Montana and Wyoming over the past 30 years. June 17, 2010 - Erwin Frank Evert, 70, was mauled by a grizzly bear in the Kitty Creek Drainage area of the Shoshone National Forest, just east of Yellowstone National Park. The bear was trapped and tranquilized hours before, as part of a Grizzly Bear research team. Later, the bear was shot and killed from a helicopter by wildlife officials Oct. 30, 2001 - Timothy Hilston, 50, brown bear attacked and killed the elk hunter as he was gutting an elk in the Clearwater Wildlife Management Area of Western Montana. May 17, 1998 - Craig Dahl, 26, last seen alive hiking in the Two Medicine area of Glacier National Park. His partially consumed remains were found three days later. Oct. 3, 1992 - John Petranyi, 40, attacked and killed by a female grizzly with two cubs on the Loop Trail, Upper McDonald Valley, Glacier National Park. Sept. 1, 1987 - Gary Goeden, 29, was missing since July 28, 1987. His partially consumed remains were found at Natahki Lake, Many Glacier Valley, Glacier National Park. April 25, 1987 - Charles Gibbs, 40, was last seen alive following and photographing a female with cubs at Elk Mountain in Glacier National Park. Investigators recovered film of the female approaching in attack mode at 50 yards. October 1986 - William Tesinsky, 38, photographer, was mauled after approaching an adult female in the Otter Creek area of Hayden Valley, Yellowstone National Park. July 1984 - Brigitta Fredenhagen, 25, dragged from a tent during the night and killed at a backcountry campsite at the southern end of White Lake in Yellowstone National Park. June 1983 - Roger May, 23, dragged from a tent during the night and killed at the Rainbow Point campground in the Gallatin National Forest. July 24, 1980 - Jane Ammerman, Kim Eberly, both 19, attacked and killed by a grizzly during the night at their campsite at Divide Creek in the St. Mary valley, Glacier National Park. Sept. 30, 1980 - Laurence Gordon, 33, attacked and killed at the Elizabeth Lake campsite in the Belly River valley at Glacier National Park.
Wyoming Horseman, Thank you for taking the time to provide all the information that you do in your comments. I hope people take the time to read them. I don't have that much traffic on my channel but your opinions and information are appreciated. Thank you
@@StanMills I thought you would like this. I met this fellow at Turpin Meadow when he was on this trip. Really a nice young man.
With Horses' Help, Army Veteran Finds Healing in Yellowstone | National Geographic
ruclips.net/video/Z_5kQgErF5A/видео.html
2019 stan films 3 wolfs - now WATCH This video introducing wolves from Canada back into yellowstone parks ruclips.net/video/YybY5sEeZUU/видео.html
great video🏆👌
some post in youtube🐻 use dogs to chase bears up trees and walk up shoot the poor little fellas They call that hunting Cowards if you ask me
i was hoping the bear would shit all over them below 😂Been watching this guy Stan Mills Videos hike around yellowstone national park👌🏆
and after 30 50 videos not many Wildlife about hes seen 30 bears if that 3-5 wolves
Guess usa has shot the fook out everything it aint what we used to see on TV in 70s from Australia pretty sad they Finally put the bear on the endagered list 2018 a bit late if you ask me
Best if Hunters stick to Shooting Ferals Pigs DEER etc so many about there out of control in australia also the same camels foxes pigs deer cane toads etc _______🚜___🌾🌾🌾___🦘_
I’ve hunted & killed a lot of bear over the 55 years I’ve live in Montana & Just so you know, bear have bad vision when looking at longer distances, so at the end of your video when you said they should see you at 300 yds., usually they won’t unless you’re moving A LOT. They have a nose that are 5-7 times better than a bloodhound when it comes to picking up scent but they have bad nearsightedness.
Boy, that's something to be proud of.
dzjc01 Good one! Ha ha. I know this might shock you, but MANY people have to hunt in order to eat, even in this country & I just happened to be one of those people, but maybe you just don’t understand that because you don’t eat meat & or you’re not originally from Montana. Typical liberal