Bears & Buffalo

21 comments

A couple weeks ago, I had the chance to visit one of our sourcing partners' ranch, located along the Rocky Mountain Front in Montana. The ecosystem on the Diamond 4D Ranch is still very much intact. Complete with the big predators such as, mountain lions, wolves and bears.

Bison on Prairie

I had received an email from the D4D ranch manager, Chris that a buffalo cow had died giving birth and that in a couple of days a Grizzly Bear might be on it. I really wanted to see this and hopefully capture an image or two, to share with you. The next day I headed north. The drive is long, about 11 hours, but I always enjoy a good road trip and I'm especially fond of the beauty of the high plains.

It was late afternoon by the time I arrived. Chris and his son Percy were there to greet me. After a short visit, we headed to a perch overlooking the creek bottom. Chris had moved the carcass to this location for two reasons; 1) to get it away from the herd and 2) to move to an area where the bears often frequent.

Overlook Deep Creek

Grizzly Bears are omnivores, with only 20% to 30% of their diet being meat. And although they would rather lay under a chokecherry bush and gorge themselves, they also like dead things.

Blood Stain

The carcass was gone, but you could see the trail of dried blood where the 900 pound carcass had been drug into the tree covered creek bottom. The wait began. After a couple of hours, there was finally movement in the trees and out came a Grizzly Bear!

Grizzly Bear

It was a young bear, but I was still over the moon! I was snapping photos as fast as I could, when I spotted another big bear through the corner of my lens.

Grizzly Bears

She came lumbering out, greeted her cub and allowed her to nurse...

Grizzly Bear


before she sniffed the air and looked right in my direction. 

Grizzly Bears

The light was starting to fall before the satiated Grizzly Bears lazily slipped back into the creek bed and we slipped away from our perch.

Grizzly Bears

Pretty good first day!   

The next morning, I set out to poke around the ranch and see if I could capture another bear opportunity or other wildlife sightings. It was raining (much needed) and the wildlife were hunkered down.

Buffalo Calf in Rain

I set off looking for the buffalo herd and found them in a grassy meadow. I enjoyed not being in a rush, and watched the playful young calves frolic in the rain.

Bison Calf in Rain

The Diamond 4D manages its ranch and bison like we do; holistic/regenerative management, large landscape grazing, 100% grass-fed, minimal handling, no antibiotics or hormones, no GMO feeds. Our mobile harvest crew go there once a year to harvest their animals to support the Wild Idea Buffalo meat supply. Our humane field harvest is what brought them on board as a sourcing partner, as they too believe in no stress to animals when taking an animal for food.

Prairie Bison

That evening, we headed out for a drive across the ranch. Although dry, it is still stunningly beautiful and full of wildlife. The evening presented a cow moose, running across a meadow (too fast to photograph), a renegade group of buffalo and a herd of elk with their calves! Thrilling to see and hear!

Elk Herd

It was such a pleasure to visit the Diamond 4D ranch and to see the conservation work they are doing and the respect they have for all creatures that are a part of the ecosystem. It gives us all a little bit of hope… Thank you Diamond 4D, for your stewardship and your partnership.

21 comments

  • Posted on by David

    Jill

    Great story and pictures.
    That truly is God’s way.

    Keep up the great stories.
    Respectfully
    David

  • Posted on by Phil Brown

    Hi ,
    Great pictures and really enjoyed reading your trip diary . Sounds like an amazing place . Keep the articles coming .
    Phil Brown , United Kingdom

  • Posted on by Janis Fitschen

    Great pics and thanks for the info about your partners in raising buffalo. It gives us more hope for the future.

  • Posted on by Debby

    Thanks for the circle of life post. It is so great to see the land on which you live and work. And, thank you for humane harvesting.

  • Posted on by Linda Clark

    Oh, boy, I needed this after all the dire news about global climate change—extreme heat in the UK, extreme drought in northern Italy, more wildfires in Spain, and of course our own climate disasters here—and the ability of one senator to throw a monkey wrench into already severely curtailed efforts to address GCC. Your photos and writing are a balm to this much-battered soul this morning, Jill!

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