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Native American
Cherokee and the American Black Bear
The Native American Cherokee have many
legends about the Black Bear and a
tribe that claims
American Black Bear full mount, Credit
to Dan Brown |
kinship with them. The
legend of the Ani Tsa' gu hi clan is a story of
how one clan joined the black bears in the
mountains where food was plenty, while another
legend speaks about a great bear and its
pursuing hunters ending up in the constellations
now known to be the Big Dipper. The blue
link above provides more common legends
(Cherokee myths, 1996).
Along with legends, the Cherokee also believe in bear
medicine, yona nvwati. Bear medicine is
not the ingestion of any of their anatomical
parts, as in some cultures, but rather, the
finding of ones self through reflection and
meditation. The reflection also includes
paying attention to ones dreams and learning to
interpret and understand them. The
Cherokee have medicine related to many animals,
research more
here (Bear
medicine, 2008).
The healing properties of bears
The healing properties that bears are thought to
possess are known throughout many cultures and
believed to have been originated in the paleolithic
period. The Ancient Greeks related
Artemis with the bear because of its
self-healing properties. Also, many
plants associated with natural medicinal
properties have 'bear' in their name, such as
bear root and bear clover, among others (Bear
medicine, 2006).
Some cultures believe so strongly in these
properties that the worlds bear populations are
threatened by over demand. The market of
body parts, most famously the gallbladder, is so
rich that China has started bear farms with what
is left of their native bear species, much like
their
fur farms. What demand there is that
cannot be met by the farms are being poached
from here, in the United States, and Canada (Bear
parts trade).
The American Black bear is both revered and coveted.
Finally gaining a foothold back into its natural
habitat, where generations before us clear
cutted their homes and drove them to
extirpation, now the Black Bear has to face an
increasing tide of poaching for the unproven
medicinal values applied to its gallbladder and
bile, as well as, the apparently delicious,
delicacy of their paws (Bear parts trade).
Did you know?
Black Bear
licking peanut butter off an antenna at
a Canadian dump, credit to Dan Brown |
Black Bear at
a Canadian dump, credit to Dan Brown |
- Bears are omnivorous
- Black Bears are excellent tree climbers
- The average Black Bear can push around a full-size dumpster as easily as
we push around shopping carts
- The bait used to attract bears for hunting consists of old donuts and
assorted candies (i.e. gummies), among other
things
- Commonly known as shy, Black Bears can become desensitized to humans
through intentional and unintentional feeding
- Bears love peanut butter
- Bears have poor eye sight but can smell for miles
- Bears make a snack out of garbage and unmanaged
dump sights are common
dinner areas and the garbage trucks serve as
dinner bells
- Poor physical condition will prevent a sow from going into estrus
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