"We were in a clearcut, where there were actually power lines and towers
and I had noticed earlier there were nests at the top of them.
I was sitting there and glanced over and happened to see a black bear on
its hind legs at the base of the tower and my first thought that went
through my mind was: that bear's gonna climb the tower but I didn't
really think that it would."
She says everyone in her party was so shocked at first, they didn't grab their cameras until the bear was near the top of the tower. "Over the next few minutes we watched him very skillfully climb the tower while the ravens were diving at him pecking at him, squawking, trying to do everything they could to discourage him, and he just climbed right to the top." Powell is the director of media relations for O.F. Mossburg and Sons, a U.S. company that makes firearms.
She had brought two hunters with decades of experience to the area to
field test some of the company's hunting guns.
"None of us had ever seen anything like that in all of our years or our
time out in the field hunting," she says.
After raiding the nest for eggs, the bear struggled a little on the
descent but made it down safely, she says. Later, the ravens just sat by
the nest "almost like they were in mourning."
Other than the great bear story, she says the group didn't have much
luck hunting.
She says everyone in her party was so shocked at first, they didn't grab their cameras until the bear was near the top of the tower. "Over the next few minutes we watched him very skillfully climb the tower while the ravens were diving at him pecking at him, squawking, trying to do everything they could to discourage him, and he just climbed right to the top." Powell is the director of media relations for O.F. Mossburg and Sons, a U.S. company that makes firearms.
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