How Two Orphaned Black Bear Cubs Survived In California: An Animal Rescue Story
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Two black bear cubs are alone in the California wilderness, getting weaker by the day, with no sign of their mom. That is where Honey and Marshall’s story begins, and it turns into a real-world look at how wildlife rescue works when the goal is not just survival, but a true return to the wild.
We walk through the moment the California Department of Fish and Wildlife calls in help, and how Gold Country Wildlife Rescue uses a smart, low-stress plan: a live trap baited with marshmallows and honey. After vets confirm the cubs are underweight but otherwise healthy, the biggest challenge shows up fast. Rehabilitation has to rebuild strength and teach skills while avoiding the one thing that can ruin release, habituation to humans.
We explain what “keeping wildlife wild” looks like in practice: no names near the cubs, as few human voices as possible, and masks during feeding so bear cubs do not learn to trust faces. By summer and fall, the cubs learn to forage, climb, and prepare for hibernation, and by spring the gate opens back to the wilderness. The best ending is the quiet one: they walk out without looking back.
We also share a simple way to prevent orphaned cubs in the first place: slow down on forest roads, especially at dawn and dusk when bears are most active. If you love animal rescue stories and practical conservation tips, subscribe, share this with a fellow animal lover, and leave a positive review.