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This made me laugh. Only in Canada! That's why I love this place.
http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Growers+guard+grow+with+live+black+bears/3414755/story.html
Police investigating an outdoor pot farm at Christina Lake stumbled across a strange menagerie of guards.
Between 10 and 15 amiable black bears popped out of the Kootenay woods to greet the officers, Sgt. Fred Mansveld said.
They were extraordinarily docile and mellow, Mansveld said.
Besides the bears, some of which had cubs, the property also contained more than 1,000 marijuana plants, a young raccoon, a pot-bellied pig, a large dog, and two human residents.
Some people were feeding the bears dog food to lure them into hanging out on the property, RCMP Const. Dave Smith said.
"It was like a cross between Jurassic Park and Jellystone Park," Smith said.
The pot farm and its inhabitants were discovered when police executed a warrant on the property July 30, though the story didn't develop legs until this week.
"Common behaviour of a bear is usually to avoid humans," Smith said.
"The ones that are used to people are quite wary of you, they don't just sit there and watch you, and these bears were just sitting around, laying around just watching, wandering around," he said.
One relaxed bear hopped up on a police cruiser to watch the action as officers dismantled the marijuana-growing operation.
In one of the two houses on the property, a raccoon was dozing, "spread-eagled on the bed, like a cat," Smith said.
The raccoon woke up and followed officers around as they searched the house. Smith said it had to be shooed away when it started rooting through a box of evidence.
In the other house, a pot-bellied pig slept right through the search, Smith said.
The human couple, a man and a woman, will face charges of production and possession of marijuana, Mansveld said.
Smith and Mansveld said the bears could have been fed to encourage them to stick close to the property to discourage theft of the plants by other criminals.
But Smith said the story has taken on mythical aspects as it makes the media rounds.
Almost as soon as the story broke earlier this week, comment boards on news websites lit up with suggestions the bears were being fed marijuana along with dog food. "No, we don't know about that," Mansveld said. "I suppose it's possible, but we don't have any evidence of that.
"But it might be the reason for their laid-back attitude," he added.
Conservation officer Dave Webster said he doubted the bears were getting anything more than a steady food source. "Lack of activity is more likely due to the fact that they're getting a large amount of food in the area and feel completely comfortable there," he said. "There's really no need for them to act in a more natural way."
In addition to drug charges, the couple may face charges of feeding wildlife, said Webster. But he doubted the bears were being encouraged to help guard the pot farm. He thought it was more likely "misguided good intent," adding it wasn't the first time conservation officers had been called out to the property because the residents were feeding bears.
What becomes of the bears depends on whether they easily return to their natural habitat and food sources, Webster said.
Christina Lake is in B.C.'s southern Interior, about 21 km east of Grand Forks.
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