Bear in a Tree Holds Michigan City in Suspense for Hours on Mother’s Day

Bear in a Tree Holds Michigan City in Suspense for Hours on Mother’s Day
Michigan Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Biologist Steve Griffith prepares to fire a tranquilizer dart into a black bear in a tree outside of a home in Traverse City, Mich., on May 14, 2023. (Jan-Michael Stump/Traverse City Record-Eagle via AP)

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich.—A city in northern Michigan has a new Mother’s Day memory: A 350-pound bear was in a tree for hours, watched by dozens of people, before it fell asleep and dropped onto mattresses below.

“It’s like the best block party ever,” Annette Andersen said.

The drama in Traverse City began when wildlife experts responded to a morning call about a bear in a leafy tree. They fired at least four tranquilizer darts into his butt. The bear snoozed on a thick limb before finally dropping to the ground by early afternoon Sunday.

Mother's Day-bear
A tranquilized black bear falls from a tree outside of a home in Traverse City, Mich., on May 14, 2023. (Jan-Michael Stump/Traverse City Record-Eagle via AP)

Ashlea Walter hauled mattresses from her house to soften the fall, the Traverse City Record-Eagle reported.

Spectators sitting on lawns or in chairs held their phones up to take pictures and video.

“They’re a tough animal,” said Steve Griffith, a state wildlife biologist. “Obviously they are in trees all the time, and they do have accidents in the wild … They can take a pretty good fall.”

NTD Photo
Onlookers watch as representatives from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, DNR Conservation Officers, Traverse City Mich, Police, Traverse City Fire, and Traverse City Light and Power work to remove a black bear from a tree outside a Fifth Street home in Traverse City’s Central Neighborhood on May 14, 2023. (Jan-Michael Stump/Traverse City Record-Eagle via AP)

The bear was transferred on a tarp to a cylindrical bear trap after his vital signs and airway were checked.

Next stop: a long drive and release in a wooded area, “probably 50-60 miles at minimum,” Griffith said.

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