Quincy: Firefighters oversee alone, hardens the bears who might lose their mother to the country’s biggest fire now on fire in northern California.
Cub-eared-eared cub looks ambbling solo along the mountain road which is burned by Dixie fire near Taylorsville, peek through the brush and jump over plants covered by fireproof chemicals.
“In general when you see them by sowing or bearing the mother, they will stay with the bear mother and run,” said Firefighn Johnnie Macy, who was deployed from Golden, Colorado, to fight with fire.
“This bear hasn’t done that, so we think we think that the orphaned bear as a result of fire.” Macy said on Sunday that they had monitored children for several days, to determine whether it was orphaned.
The wildlife rescue team is waiting to extract thin children from scars of scars.
Macy called the “heartbreaking,” situation but said it was “Mother Nature took her way.” The Dixie Fire has burned for more than a month and destroys more than 1,000 houses and businesses with nearly 15,000 structures still under threat.
Pacific Gas & Electric said the fire might have been triggered when the tree fell on the power line.
A bear called “Smokey”, of course, the most famous orphan in the country was saved from Wildfire.
Bears burned badly rescued from New Mexico Wildfire in 1950 and became a living manifestation, breathing from the national campaign launched in 1944 when the US Forest Service and the Council AD agreed that the bear fiction would be a symbol for fire prevention campaigns.
Earlier this month, the child bear with burns to claws and his nose was saved from the fire in East SiSkiyou District in California.
Also this month, a child who was injured reviewed the care center of Lake Tahoe wildlife where he was treated because the burns were maintained in fire.
The bear has been seen in the wild.