Brown (Grizzly) Spring Bear Cub or COY (Cub of the year)

This spring cub or C.O.Y. (Cub of the Year) looked lonely and sad as it seemed to want to join our group and play with us.

In Katmai National Park, brown bear cubs stay with their mothers for 2.5 years. During a cub's first year of life, they are considered cubs-of-the-year (COYs) or spring cubs. In their second year, they are generally called yearlings and will den with their mother for at least one more winter.

Coastal Brown (Grizzly) Bear Spring Cub (Ursus arctos, Ours Brun) Hallo Bay, Katmai National Park, Alaska. From my Ultimate Alaska Bear Boat Trip. Image Copyright ©Christopher Dodds. Sony Alpha a9 Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 400mm f/2.8 G Master OSS Lens with Sony FE 2X Teleconverter @800mm ISO 6,400, f/8 @ 1/3,200s Manual exposure. Join me in Alaska for the Ultimate Brown Bears Galore Workshop Adventure. LEARN MORE HERE.

“The trip with Chris on the ship along the Katmai coast was fantastic. Without a doubt, it was one of the top photo trips I have taken over the last several years due to the amazing variety and density of wildlife in such completely unspoiled and uninhabited wilderness. Unlike land-based lodges, with the ship, you have the opportunity to photograph in several of Katmai's secluded bays versus being limited to an area adjacent to a land-based lodge. What helped make the trip so successful was Chris's work ethic where he is always ready to shoot in any weather conditions and will stay in the field as long as there is any possibility for high-quality photography. This is essential in a place like coastal Alaska where it can go from direct sunny conditions to heavy overcast to rain in the blink of an eye and where the sun doesn't set until the late evening. If the best time to photograph Brown Bears chasing down salmon was after 10:00 PM, you bet we'd be on the river bank waiting on the massive Brown Bear boars to make their spectacular runs--photography is the top priority, after the safety of course. The daily great fresh seafood didn't exactly hurt the trip either.
As I write this I've only a little over two weeks removed from returning from Katmai and I'm still having serious withdrawals--right now I really want to be on the ship's skiff heading to shore to photograph more bears, eagles, and wolves.”

Steve Metildi | Southern California | USA (June 2010 Workshop)