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About those bears…

May 25, 2017

photo by Nicki Felicetti
photo by Nicki Felicetti

The Hanover Conservancy has worked hard for many, many years to educate the Hanover community about how to co-exist with native wildlife, including the bears that, for generations, have occupied a home range near downtown and Mink Brook. We’ve sponsored programs by a variety of bear experts, blanketed inboxes with repeated pleas to take in birdfeeders, stuffed flyers in doors, posted signs, and sought help from the town and state. We organized a meeting with these experts and, most recently, sought volunteers to help with “bear hazing” to try to deter the bears from approaching homes in a last-ditch effort to stave off the inevitable.

Despite these efforts and those of many concerned neighbors, a bounty of birdfeeders, unsecured trash, and other inappropriate food sources remained available, leading the mother bear to teach her cubs to seek these rather than wild foods. The result is cubs that are twice the size they should be for their age, with no fear of humans or concept of bear/human boundaries. Much as we’d like to imagine that a different future could await bears that think it’s okay to help themselves to brownies on a kitchen counter, there is, unfortunately, no “Bear-Anon” to rehabilitate a bear that has strayed from its wild roots. And it is not the bears’ fault.

The bears will ultimately pay the price for human mistakes that are forcing state biologists to trap and euthanize the mother and her cubs. Nobody wants that fate for them, but with such unnatural habits, the bears cannot be released elsewhere. They would either continue their dangerous ways in their new home or would find their way back to Hanover after being driven out by bears already living there.  There is no other place a bear gone bad can go.

When one Hanover neighborhood decided to clean up its bear attractants and got serious about it, the bears stopped visiting, according to deputy fire chief Mike Hinsley, who has diligently scouted the situation. Bear-proof trash containers, taking in birdfeeders when bears emerge in spring, and confining access to compost are all sensible solutions.  We strongly support a town-wide ordinance requiring responsible management of trash and other bear attractants.

In the meantime, we recognize that there is excellent bear habitat in our area – Indian Ridge, Velvet Rocks, and stream corridors – and that it’s only a matter of time before a new bear discovers the recently-vacated territory in Hanover. We hope this time the bear receives a different welcome, from a community that has united to help it remain wild and free.

Filed Under: Bears, Mink Brook

Celebrate Earth Day

April 22, 2015

We’ll keep you busy all day Saturday, April 25!  Our next spring bird trip begins at 6:30 am. At 1:30, meet at the Howe Library for “A Walk Back in Time: The Secrets of Cellar Holes” followed by a field trip inside the gated Trescott Company lands. MORE

Filed Under: Birds, Events, Forest Ecology, Mink Brook, Outdoor Trips, Trescott

Bears are out, Spring trip cards, too

March 12, 2015

It was a short nap this year, despite bitter cold. Bears are up and about – and hungry! Time to take in those birdfeeders.

Our spring schedule of trips and programs is now available. See you there!

Filed Under: Mink Brook, Wildlife

Mink Brook Bears Out and About

December 30, 2014

Our bear spies near the Mink Brook Nature Preserve are still reporting sightings of a sow and her three cubs, most recently on Gilson Road on Dec. 31, the latest anyone can recall.  The birds might have to rely on wild food for another week or two. A ready source of “take-out” (your birdfeeder) might keep the bears from hitting the sack on time.

Filed Under: Mink Brook, Wildlife

Deer Season

November 10, 2014

News on the 2014 deer hunting season on Conservancy properties is now available. Be safe out there – wear your orange!

Filed Under: Balch Hill, Deer, Events, Greensboro Ridge, Hunting, Indoor Programs, Mink Brook, Slade Brook, Trails, Wildlife

The Abenaki at Mink Brook…and Deer Season

October 27, 2014

Join us on Sunday, Nov. 9 for a look at Mink Brook from the Abenaki perspective. No dogs, please.

Hunting is in progress. Be safe out there – wear your orange!

Filed Under: Balch Hill, Mink Brook, Outdoor Trips, Trails, Wildlife

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71 Lyme Road
Hanover, NH 03755
(603) 643-3433

info@hanoverconservancy.org

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