Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Smokey Bear was real? Author from Boca pens tale of real-life cub
Nearly 65 years ago, a teenage Karen Signell gazed at the bear cub
lolling in a tree inside his exhibit at the National Zoo and wondered
why his eyes seemed so sad. Rescued from a forest fire in New Mexico in May 1950, the orphaned
little brown bear had been flown to the zoo in Washington, D.C., to
become a living symbol of Smokey Bear, the blue jeans and ranger
hat-wearing character that popularized the phrase, "Only YOU can prevent
wildfires."Signell,
a born animal lover, knew about Smokey's life but still wanted to know
more about the bear. So she decided to write his story. And just months
ago, the now 79-year-old Boca Raton woman published the U.S. Forest Service-licensed novel that's been a lifetime in the making. Called "Smokey Bear: The Cub Who Left His Pawprints on History,"
Signell's book details the bear's life based on years of research,
including meeting with a man whose family helped heal Smokey's burned
paws and belly, visiting the mountain where he was found and reading
endlessly about the campaign he brought to life. The book is told from Smokey's perspective. Don
Bell, who helped his parents and sister care for the cub at their Santa
Fe, N.M., home, initially wasn't sure about that approach. He thought
it might come out "hokey." "I've lived with this thing since 1950, so when I first heard what
she was going to do, I thought, 'Well, OK, I'll go along,'" said Bell,
79, of Las Cruces, N.M. "After she got it all put together and
everything and finished it up, I read it and I think she did a pretty
damn good job." He was around 15 when his dad came home with the
then-5-pound bear. A cowboy turned game warden, Ray Bell, Don Bell's
father, was stationed in New Mexico's Capitan Mountains when the forest
fire that injured Smokey broke out. The
Bell family was constantly taking in wild animals, so Don Bell didn't
think much of the "cute little guy" who slept in a rabbit cage on the
back porch. But the story of the rescued cub would become a
national phenomenon. Smokey's arrival at the capital airport drew
hundreds of reporters, photographers and onlookers, and he appeared in
newspapers across the country...more
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