Tag Archives: California Academy of Sciences

That Bear

The bear on the CA state flag may be the most famous grizzly bear in the world. He’s certainly the most reproduced. I am not sure at what point in history there became more images of grizzly bears than actual grizzly bears, but certainly we passed it a long, long time ago. What most people don’t know is that the bear on the flag was an actual living, breathing bear. And he was the last California grizzly to be caught alive. His name was Monarch and he was captured in a ploy by William Randolph Hearst to boost newspaper sales in the 1880s (by then everyone knew the bears were disappearing and Hearst thought an account of the capture of the very last one would sell papers).

In 1952, there was an effort to make the bear on the old flag look more believable and “less like a pig.” Monarch was (and is) the only stuffed and mounted specimen of a California grizzly in existence, so he was the model.

The original flag was designed by William Todd "on a piece of new unbleached cotton. The star imitated the lone star of Texas. A grizzly bear represented the many bears seen in the state...It was adopted by the 1911 State Legislature as the State Flag. ” SFmuseum.org

This is Monarch today…at the California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park, with the musician Good Shield Aguilar.

Aubree Bernier-Clarke and I made a short film about all this (I will put it up here in the next few days)…

Penguins

A few weeks ago I interviewed Pam Schaller of the California Academy of Sciences about the colony of penguins she has been caring for for years. When she first began working with them they did not like to go in the water. She taught them to enjoy swimming again. Here is proof.

I first came across Pam and her work while reading about Pierre, the first wet-suit wearing penguin. He molted but his feathers were not growing back in and the other penguins had begun to pick on him. Pam made him a wetsuit and after a few months, his feathers grew back in again.

Listen to the NPR story.

There is even a children’s book.

 

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