Sudbury·Audio

Sickly bear cub from Wawa wouldn't have survived winter: rescuer

A bear cub is on the mend after getting help from the Wild at Heart Wildlife Refuge Centre in Sudbury.

Rescuers named the cub Kris Kringle because he was found so close to the Christmas holiday

A bear cub rescued near Wawa has been named Kris Kringle because he was found so close to Christmas. (Gloria Morissette/Supplied)
An emaciated bear cub was rescued in Wawa and is now in Sudbury. The bear was taken to the Wild at Heart Wildlife Refuge Centre. Gloria Morissette is the Animal Care Manager at the centre. She told us more about the condition of the cub.

A bear cub is on the mend after getting help from the Wild at Heart Wildlife Refuge Centre in Sudbury.

The cub was found wandering on a road near Wawa last Friday. The person who found him picked him up and fed him some peanut butter.

Ministry of Natural Resources officials were called, and they transported their sickly charge to Sault Ste. Marie, where refuge centre volunteers then drove him the rest of the way to Sudbury.

Wild at Heart manager Gloria Morissette said the bear wouldn't have lasted much longer.

The bear cub's paws were badly cut, likely from digging for food in the ice and snow. (Gloria Morissette/Supplied)

"He is so tiny, he just fit in a medium sized dog carrier. He was not in very good shape," she said.

"Normally you wouldn't be able to transport a bear in a carrier like that. They would easily rip off the front door, but he was in such poor shape he had no fight left in him."

Morissette figures the cub lost his mother sometime this summer, and he wasn't old enough to know what to do.

She said a cub of his age should have weighed 45-50 pounds, but he weighed only 17 pounds. He wouldn't survive hibernation, she added.

The bear's paws were badly cut, probably from digging for food in the ice and snow, Morissette said.

"The front feet, in particular, were bad. I guess he was trying to dig, trying desperately to find food. Some of his toe pads, you can actually see the bone protruding through."

The cub is doing much better after a few days of care.

The volunteers who rescued the bear named him Kris Kringle because he was found so close to Christmas, she said.

The cub will now be transferred to a bear refuge centre in southern Ontario that specializes in helping black bears.

Clarifications

  • A previous version of this story indicated the bear was named "Chris." He was actually named Kris Kringle.
    Dec 18, 2014 9:40 AM ET