If it looks like bear spoor, smells like bear spoor, tastes like bear spoor then it’s bear spoor. How can you tell the size of the bear by the size of the spoor pile?
According to the Jmovie the Jungle Book, you can bargin for your life with angry bear by contracting to get honey for him from the side of a cliff, which is a place bear’s cant get at ;)
Suddenly we’ve been transported from Frogville to Jackson Hole, Wyoming….home of Yellowstone National Park. What next, American Indians? :)> YaHooAGowa!!
Spoor comes from the Netherlands word for “track”.For example in Dutch a railroad is a “spoorweg” or a “track way”. Thus most directly here we are talking about footprints although the other signs of passage of a bear would also be part of the “track”.
jackhs over 8 years ago
SmokeyBearNolikefireagawa
Polsixe over 8 years ago
If it looks like bear spoor, smells like bear spoor, tastes like bear spoor then it’s bear spoor. How can you tell the size of the bear by the size of the spoor pile?
brickhouse over 8 years ago
Oooooooo.. mr bear, I am going to steal some of your delightful honey :) haha! JK
brickhouse over 8 years ago
Tarzan just has to out run the elephant trunk guy an he will be alright
brickhouse over 8 years ago
According to the Jmovie the Jungle Book, you can bargin for your life with angry bear by contracting to get honey for him from the side of a cliff, which is a place bear’s cant get at ;)
Old Comic Strip Lover over 8 years ago
You would think his partner would know about the giant bear. His city is in these mountains.
1soni Premium Member over 8 years ago
So, if a bear "spoors in the mountains…?!?
profkatz over 8 years ago
Suddenly we’ve been transported from Frogville to Jackson Hole, Wyoming….home of Yellowstone National Park. What next, American Indians? :)> YaHooAGowa!!
Ray_C over 8 years ago
“Spoor” can even refer to bent grass blades or broken bush twigs. Anything that can tell you an animal’s track, its size, its species…
Locksley1 over 8 years ago
Heeey BooBoo, look it’s lunch……
damonc2 over 8 years ago
Spoor comes from the Netherlands word for “track”.For example in Dutch a railroad is a “spoorweg” or a “track way”. Thus most directly here we are talking about footprints although the other signs of passage of a bear would also be part of the “track”.
Peam Premium Member over 8 years ago
This must be a fairly rare bear or a VERY old story – the last ones (Atlas bears) died out some 150 years ago….
Polsixe over 8 years ago
@RayC and @Green Man, c’mon guys a little levity with the day’s comic, why so serious?