Manitoba·Video

'Doc Moose' and his teen granddaughter share their adventures with 'kings of the bush' in new short film

Moose expert Vince Crichton dedicates life to protecting the kings of the bush. His granddaughter Julia Hobson, 14, narrates a new short film about her family's connection to moose.

Julia and the Big Bull explores family's love for moose and each other

Julia Hobson and her grandfather, world-renowned moose expert Vince Crichton, practise their moose calls. Crichton, a.k.a. Doc Moose, and Hobson are the subject of a new short film called Julia and the Big Bull. (Supplied by Electric Monk Media Ltd.)

Vince Crichton came by his love of moose the natural way: he inherited it. 

His father, a wildlife biologist, often worked in the bush in northern Ontario. Upon returning to the family home, his father would tell young Vince about all the moose he spotted on his adventures. 

Crichton's love of the "kings of the bush" started there. Today, he is also a wildlife biologist, known as Doc Moose, and recognized as one of the world's foremost experts on the animal. 

Winnipeg moose expert and wildlife biologist Vince Crichton has been studying the large woodland animals since the early 1970s. (Supplied by Electric Monk Media Ltd. )

Crichton has also passed that love of animals to the next generation in his only grandchild, Julia Hobson. Today, the Grade 9 student loves studying wildlife, particularly marine biology. Crichton introduced his granddaughter to moose as a toddler while on a trail hike in Riding Mountain National Park in western Manitoba.

That story unfolds in a new short film for CBC Manitoba's Creator Network called Julia and the Big Bull. Hobson, 14, narrates the film, sharing stories growing up with her grandpa, Doc Moose. 

Watch Julia and the Big Bull:

Julia and the Big Bull

6 years ago
Duration 3:29
A moose-loving grandpa teaches his granddaughter about loving the wild through the at-risk creatures. Courtesy: Electric Monk Media

The three-and-a-half​-minute-long film, by Winnipeg-based Electric Monk Media Ltd., is a slice of Canadiana with a message about dwindling moose populations and the implications for the entire ecosystem.

The moose population in Manitoba is currently less than 15,000, said Crichton. In the late 1960s and early 1970s the population was between 35,000 and 40,000. Crichton, who is also a hunter, wants more managed hunting with enforceable laws for rule breakers — and above all shared management of moose — so they survive for generations to come. 

"I have been fascinated with moose all my life," said Crichton, who lives in Winnipeg.

"They are a Canadian icon and they have been good to me. They have got me around the world twice now."

Crichton has had many close encounters with the large woodland creatures over years of field study. (Supplied by Vince Crichton)