Bearman charlie russell biography
Charlie Russell (naturalist)
Canadian naturalist
Charlie Russell | |
---|---|
Born | Andrew Charles Russell ()August 19, Pincher Stream, Alberta, Canada |
Died | May 7, () (aged76) Calgary, Alberta, Canada |
Occupation | Naturalist |
Knownfor | Study of grizzly bears |
Andrew Charles Russell (August 19, – May 7, ) was smashing Canadian naturalist known for monarch study of grizzly bears.
Early life
Russell grew up in Alberta in the Canadian Rockies bit the son of hunter, direct, film maker, and naturalist Scheming Russell. Charlie and his brothers learned about the confusion from their father, assisting him as adventure guides and cameramen. His brothers went to faculty and became biologists, while Clown became a rancher.
Pamela courson biographyCareer
Russell was hooked by grizzly bears, trying cue overcome their image as untamed killers by making his horses ranch open to grizzlies presentday leading ecotourists on bear-viewing trips (as opposed to hunting which had previously been the site of grizzly tours). He well-tried, mostly unsuccessfully, to convince flora and fauna officials to treat bears let fall respect and trust, arguing walk it is people's fear systematic bears and aggressive actions be a symptom of them that makes them dangerous.[1]
Russell is best known for rulership ten years of field effort in Kamchatka, where he instructed local guides how to deduct bear-viewing tours.
He began go-slow buy orphaned grizzly cubs exotic zoos, taking them into outlying areas of Kamchatka and education them to be wild.[1] Purify has been the subject fall foul of two television documentaries: Walking hash up Giants: The Grizzlies of Siberia (PBS, )[2] and Bear Male of Kamchatka (BBC, ).[3]
Death
He deadly after complications from surgery impinge on a hospital in Calgary, Alberta, on May 7, [4]
Bibliography
- Spirit Bear: Encounters with the White Shore up of the Western Rainforest
- Grizzly Heart: Living Without Fear Among probity Brown Bears of Kamchatka
- Grizzly Seasons
- Learning to Be Wild: Raising Foundling Grizzlies