Skip to content

Travel Bug Dog Tag Kenai the Grizzly Bear

Trackable Options
Found this item? Log in.
Printable information sheet to attach to Kenai the Grizzly Bear Print Info Sheet
Owner:
RedFox17 Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Origin:
New York, United States
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

This is not collectible.

Use TB7FCM0 to reference this item.

First time logging a Trackable? Click here.

Current Goal

My name is Kenai, and I'm a Grizzly Bear. I'm on my way back to my home in Alaska, and I'm hoping you can help me. I would also love to roam the caches of Canada along the way. I would love it if you could take pictures of me and my journey.

About This Item

Kenai the Grizzly Bear

I am a Grizzly Bear figurine with a travel bug tag attached to me. I am NOT collectible. Please DO NOT keep me. Help me move from cache to cache. Please take pictures of me.

Grizzly Bear

The grizzly bear is a North American subspecies of the brown bear.

These awe-inspiring giants tend to be solitary animals—with the exception of females and their cubs—but at times they do congregate. Dramatic gatherings of grizzly bears can be seen at prime Alaskan fishing spots when the salmon run upstream for summer spawning. In this season, dozens of bears may gather to feast on the fish, craving fats that will sustain them through the long winter ahead.

Brown bears dig dens for winter hibernation, often holing up in a suitable-looking hillside. Females give birth during this winter rest and their offspring are often twins.

Grizzly bears are powerful, top-of-the-food-chain predators, yet much of their diet consists of nuts, berries, fruit, leaves, and roots. Bears also eat other animals, from rodents to moose. Grizzly bears are also known for being scavengers, stealing food from wolves and humans.

Grizzlies are typically brown, though their fur can appear to be white-tipped, or grizzled, lending them their traditional name.

Despite their impressive size, grizzlies are quite fast and have been clocked at 30 miles (48 kilometers) an hour. They can be dangerous to humans, particularly if surprised or if humans come between a mother and her cubs.

Grizzlies once lived in much of western North America and even roamed the Great Plains. European settlement gradually eliminated the bears from much of this range, and today only about 1,000 grizzlies remain in the continental U.S., where they are protected by law. Many grizzlies still roam the wilds of Canada and Alaska, where hunters pursue them as big game trophies.

Status: Least concern
Type: Mammal
Diet: Omnivore
Average life span in the wild: 25 years
Size: 5 to 8 ft (1.5 to 2.5 m)
Weight: 800 lbs (363 kg)

Gallery Images related to Kenai the Grizzly Bear

View All 10 Gallery Images

Tracking History (3086.1mi) View Map

Mark Missing 12/13/2018 RedFox17 marked it as missing   Visit Log

The owner has set this Trackable as missing.

Dropped Off 7/28/2018 mnboyscout placed it in Dexter Park Cache Minnesota - 6.87 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/28/2018 mnboyscout took it to SK247 Minnesota - .32 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/28/2018 mnboyscout took it to SK247 #2 Minnesota - 8.6 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/28/2018 mnboyscout took it to SK247 #3 Minnesota - 21.65 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/28/2018 mnboyscout took it to Welcome to the Rochester International Airport Minnesota - 7.99 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/27/2018 mnboyscout took it to Cone of Shame Minnesota - 5.49 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/25/2018 mnboyscout took it to Walking Cache Minnesota - 65.52 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/25/2018 mnboyscout took it to Twins Win! Minnesota - 4.2 miles  Visit Log
Visited 7/23/2018 mnboyscout took it to Fairway Walk Minnesota - .39 miles  Visit Log
data on this page is cached for 3 mins