After devastating floods in Pakistan, our reporter visits one mud-drenched community to see how resilience and compassion are playing out in the lives of residents.
Monitor photographer Melanie Stetson Freeman felt the tears welling up.聽
Just moments ago, she had arrived at the bear research institute in Ely, Minnesota. She was told there was no guarantee she鈥檇 see any bears. The wild mammals come and go as they please. 鈥淏ut when I pulled up,鈥 says Melanie, 鈥渟omeone shouted, 鈥楨lvis is here!鈥欌澛
Elvis, it turned out, was a new visitor. She watched as Dr. Lynn Rogers quietly sat down on a log near the yearling. She had heard about the biologist鈥檚 compassion for wildlife and commitment to teaching humans how to live in harmony with bears. Now, she was seeing it firsthand.
Slowly, the young black bear moved toward him, and was soon eating hazelnuts from his hand. 鈥淚 was tearing up. It was so moving to see something that positive from a creature that鈥檚 鈥榮upposed鈥 to kill us,鈥 she says.
Melanie describes the next couple of days as one of her all-time favorite photo assignments. She shares 鈥淒oc鈥 Rogers鈥 values. 鈥淎nyone who helps us coexist with wildlife is a hero to me,鈥 she says.聽
But as reporter Doug Struck writes today in his profile, Dr. Rogers鈥 methods are controversial 鈥 including hand-feeding a bear. State and federal wildlife officials tell the public not to do it. Some of Dr. Rogers鈥 longtime volunteers won鈥檛 do it. And the veteran bear ambassador doesn鈥檛 approach every bear himself. 鈥淒oc reads their body language. He can tell if a bear is uncomfortable, and he鈥檒l back away,鈥 Melanie says.聽
But she couldn鈥檛 resist hand-feeding a bear named Cedric. 鈥淚 was photographing him as he was rolling around on a log and being silly. Someone else was feeding him and invited me to try,鈥 she says. Unlike with horses, where you have to hold your hand flat because they might bite your finger, bear tongues are like suction cups: 鈥淭hey just snatch the hazelnuts from your hand,鈥 she says.
鈥淚t was magical.鈥