Momma bear persuades cubs to scale wall in adorable footage

A Colorado Springs motorist has captured footage showing three bear cubs trying to scale a rock wall in order to join momma bear.

A Colorado Springs motorist has captured footage showing three bear cubs trying to scale a rock wall in order to join momma bear.

In the KKTV 11 News footage, captured by Jeremy Johnson, momma black bear has already scaled the wall and is encouraging her cubs to follow.

But the roadside wall is steep and the tiny cubs are new at climbing.

Momma bear seems to realizes this, and is about to descend the wall when one cub safely scrambles up and over.


This seems to inspire the other cubs, one of which follows the route taken by the first cub.

Rooting them on, Johnson says in the video, “Come on little guys, you can do it. Climb! Climb!”

Mission accomplished, the bear family continues its adventure safely off the road, albeit in somebody’s yard.

Reads the top comment beneath the KKTV 11 post:

“So smart. That second one saw where the first one went and moved there. This is so cute. Nothing like life in the Springs.”

Another popular comment: “Awww… such a good lesson here too… Sometimes we gotta let them figure it out.”

Cub rides on momma bear’s head in adorable swimming video

In a precious wildlife sighting in Canada, a cub was captured in video hitching a ride across a lake atop of momma bear’s head.

In a precious wildlife sighting in Canada, a cub was captured in video hitching a ride across a lake on top of momma bear’s head.

The sighting occurred earlier this month in Saint-Ubalde, Quebec, and the video was posted Thursday by ViralHog.

The reactions were wide-ranging, with several wanting more footage:

“Such a good mama.”

“I thought the cub was floating!”

“I could have watched a longer version of this. It’s really cute.”

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“Man, why only 10 sec?”

“That was sweet and cute.”

“Just adorable.”

Bears are excellent swimmers and are said to swim across lakes and rivers while patrolling their territories.

“Since bears like to hunt fish, they are not shy of water,” BearLife.org writes. “In fact, their baby cubs take to the water quickly.

“In their search for food in their habitat they can cross ponds, lakes, and rivers to get to better feeding grounds (including campgrounds, lodges, and resorts). They use their powerful front and hind legs to paddle swiftly through water and are actually graceful swimmers.”

Photo courtesy of ViralHog.

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