An Untitled Story
Jul 27th, 2009 | By mervi | Category: Featured articlesI have discovered these photos by accident on one website but because there was nothing else, no source, no author, no attachment of any kind, I didn’t think to make a story out of it in our magazine until I found yet one more photo to complete this set (the last one). And it is quite stunning.
These photos tell a story of a human + animal cohabitation in a northern region, possibly Russia. The photos look very old as if from a different planet. They paint a moving fairy tale that could only originate in a paradise where people and animals can cohabit peacefully.
Below the set I have included an article that I’ve found to shine a little bit of light on the situation of polar bears in Russia. I hope it helps at least a bit. The polar bears may after all be Rasputin’s ancestors.


Click the last photo to enlarge it. The size is pretty big and you can see this stunning shot in a close up.
The article below written by Julie A. Corwin illustrates the situation in Russia today, and I think helps a bit to understand the dynamics between the Russian natives co-habitation with polar bear population.
Russia: Hunting Polar Bears To Save Them
January 18, 2007
By Julie A. Corwin
WASHINGTON, January 18, 2007 — In December, Russian officials found evidence that two polar bears had traveled within 200 kilometers of the villages of Vankarem and Reirkaipii located along the Chukotka Sea — a long way from their usual habitat.
The polar bears were attracted by the rotting carcasses of dead walruses.
Warmer winters have introduced new layers of risk for Russia’s polar bear population. With less sea ice and a shortened hunting season, the bears have had to widen their search for food thus increasing their contact with humans.
Margaret Williams, the director of the World Wildlife Fund’s Bering Sea Ecoregion Program, says that “climate change is a really huge, huge factor that’s changing a lot of things for people and bears, causing bears to spend more time on land and increasing the potential for human-bear contact.”
Poaching Problem
Human-bear contact will likely mean more poaching. Poachers in Russia’s Far North have long plagued the polar bears — dotted in colonies along the sea coast of the Far North.
Fearing poachers would wipe out the polar bear, in 1956, the Russian government declared the species endangered and banned all hunting of polar bears.
The International Polar Bear Agreement was signed in 1973 allowing only the use of traditional weapons in hunting polar bears because the international polar bear population was being overharvested around the world.
The problem in Russia — and one that’s likely to increase given the greater human-bear contact — is that poaching legislation is difficult to enforce. With polar bear skins selling for an average of $4,500, the stakes are high. And the fines and the prison sentences are relatively small. A couple of years ago, Williams reports that her group found 55 polar bear skins available for sale on Russian websites.
Under Russian law, villagers are allowed to shoot a bear in self-defense but only after they have called Moscow and asked for permission first.
Williams says that in reality — particularly in a crisis situation — some bears are killed first and Moscow called later.
“In one of the larger towns earlier this year, we had heard that eight bears had been killed and three of them were skinned,” Williams says. ”So, that’s kind of unofficial information, but anyway we know that maybe some bears are being removed in the guise of some other excuse but then the skins are being taken for sale.”
Controlled Hunting
Now some environmentalists believe that allowing some hunting, rather than a total ban, may be the best way to save the bears.
Williams says that controlled, responsible hunting is what’s needed. “It’s going to be really important to work with the [native] communities because they have a stake in managing the polar bear population in the best way possible, and they want to make sure the bears are around for a long time,” Williams says.
“Having people who are allowed to hunt very carefully and responsibly — they’re going to be the guys who are controlling against the poachers who are just doing it for the skins.”
The United States and Canada allow indigenous people to engage in what is called “subsistence” hunting. Canada also allows a small regulated hunt for sport among nonindigenous peoples.
Indigenous people in Alaska have been organizing “polar bear brigades,” and their neighbors in Chukotkan villages are starting to adopt some of the same methods. The brigades use loud sounds, among other techniques, to scare bears away from villages. The brigades also educate residents about how bear behavior and how to spot “problem bears.”
International Support
With the greater risk to polar bear populations, there is growing international support for controlled hunting.
Last month, the U.S. Congress passed legislation that would enable the implementation of the U.S.-Russia Polar Bear Agreement, which will help protect polar bears from overhunting.
The agreement, which was first signed in 2000, was stalled in the Congress for the past several years. The treaty’s provisions will allow the indigenous peoples of Russia to hunt polar bears legally under strict quotas for the first time in 51 years.
Polar bears aren’t the only bears affected by the warmer weather. In northern Spain, scientists have noticed that brown bears that usually hibernate in winter are roaming through the forests searching for food.
Bears normally hibernate during winter as food is too scarce. But scientists in Spain think that the warmer weather makes it worth foraging for nuts and berries.
It looks likely that bears will continue to be seen in places that they have never been seen before.
































Dear Leaf, thank you so much for publishing these amazing photos here. The photo with the man, the mother bear and her two cubs is unbelievable!! I haven’t read the article yet but I will as soon as I have some time…..
Hugs from Mervi
Leaf,
Thanks for the article; that last picture IS stunning…and I wonder if it’s actually a woman…look at the hand and the face….xo k-j
Dear Leaf,
OH MY GOD!! The last picture is absolutely mind-boggling!! Knuti-Judi may be right, that may be a woman… The photo with the pigs tells you a lot too because although the bear is not an adult, it is still a polar bear, and the pigs show no concern at all–just business as usual for them it seems. Great job, Leaf, getting this story together. Controlled hunting is necessary I guess but it still bothers me. But I have to remember that if there were no deer hunting seasons, for example, a lot of deer would slowly starve to death.
Thanks Leaf, I hope you find more pictures!!
Bear hugs, Sarsam
Hi Leaf,
these photos were touching me deeply. Thank you so much for sharing this with all of us.
Yes, I agree, it might be a woman. The cub clinging at her leg and the bearmom takes carefully s.th. out of her hand.
The photo with the bear and the pigs is also very impressing. With your article you have put Russia into a different light.
bh from caren
Dear Leaf — What a discovery, this story and PHOTOS !!! The little bear tugging at the man’s leg, of course, brings me back to Knut’s early days with Thomas. The polar bear thing is becoming a quest to see, know, read more about these magnificent creatures. Thank you!
Bear Hugs, Tish
These photos are amazing in so many ways.
The cubs’ mother shows respect towards the woman like KnutiJudy suggested- and I agree- her face and hands give it away. I am wondering what it is exactly the object handed over, looks like an empty cup, maybe just a toy.
And what else is amazing is the person behind the camera with whom the polar bears seem to be completely comfortable around (they seem to be ignoring him/her and behave as accepting as the one in the photo). Maybe it’s this woman’s husband or someone in the family that the bears are familiar with as well. Can you imagine the rest of the story- what happened prior and afterwards? Maybe the people and animals interract this comfortably with each other on regular basis. The cubs’ playfulness indicates that they play with each other quite often, if not every day.
I think this scene may not have been as unusual at that time and in that place where these photos came from. Most likely this is only a piece of a larger tradition of human and polar bear cohabitation in that time and place.
Leaf – thanks this photos are amazing and the article is interesting.