Canadian Royal Mounties are used to finding guards when they raid one of the country’s illegal marijuana farms or “grow ops” as they are known. The owners of such farms have been known to employ humans, dogs and even booby traps to deter thieves who might come after their crops. So when Mounties went to raid such a farm in a remote part of westernmost Canada that it was being guarded was no surprise. Who was guarding it was though.
The officers were astonished to see a pack of black bears standing guard over the crops they had come to confiscate. Not that they were doing a very good job though, said Police Sergeant Fred Mansveld. “They were tame, they just sat around watching… at one point one of the bears climbed onto the hood of a police car, sat there for a bit and then jumped off,” said Mansveld.
All of the officers who took part in the raid were used to working with animals and once it became apparent the bears were very docile they were not at all afraid of the “pot guards”
As amusing as all this sounds, by taming the bears the two owners of the marijuana farm may have condemned them to death.
Sergeant Mansveld said they believed that the bears were regularly fed dog food to encourage them to stick around to guard the farm. Under law that is illegal. If a bear becomes “tame” conservation officer Dave Webster explained to the press, it will often seek out other people to feed it as well, destroying property and sometimes injuring humans.
“If a bear is deemed to be a safety risk and is habituated to human food and not able to feed itself in the wild, it will be destroyed,” he explained.
Mr. Webster is conducting an investigation into the case to determine if the drug farm bears can be spared.
Sounds to me like the bears might have been in the crop!
AAnt
The officers were astonished to see a pack of black bears standing guard over the crops they had come to confiscate. Not that they were doing a very good job though, said Police Sergeant Fred Mansveld. “They were tame, they just sat around watching… at one point one of the bears climbed onto the hood of a police car, sat there for a bit and then jumped off,” said Mansveld.
All of the officers who took part in the raid were used to working with animals and once it became apparent the bears were very docile they were not at all afraid of the “pot guards”
As amusing as all this sounds, by taming the bears the two owners of the marijuana farm may have condemned them to death.
Sergeant Mansveld said they believed that the bears were regularly fed dog food to encourage them to stick around to guard the farm. Under law that is illegal. If a bear becomes “tame” conservation officer Dave Webster explained to the press, it will often seek out other people to feed it as well, destroying property and sometimes injuring humans.
“If a bear is deemed to be a safety risk and is habituated to human food and not able to feed itself in the wild, it will be destroyed,” he explained.
Mr. Webster is conducting an investigation into the case to determine if the drug farm bears can be spared.
Sounds to me like the bears might have been in the crop!
AAnt