Really sad about polar bears.....

sequoias

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Photos capture polar bears' struggle | KOMO News - Seattle, Washington | News

A polar bear is one of the last things you'd want up close and in your face. But a Seattle photographer dedicated years to watching, documenting and getting within inches of polar bears.

The results go on display at the Burke Museum on Saturday, June 28.

Steven Kazlowski trained his lens on the king of the Arctic, and the pictures and his message are stunning.

"I don't want to use the word 'friend,'" Kazlowski says, "but we became acquainted with each other and I felt quite safe around them and they were quite trusting of me. And that allowed me to really intimately see how they lived their lives."

Kazlowski describes polar bears as extremely intelligent creatures with deep personalities and high curiosity.

One photo shows a 9-month-old that broke through the ice to see Kazlowski up close -- and tried to pull him into the water to play.

Another reached inside his tent while he slept and put its paw on Kazlowski's head.

"I was completely freaked out and screamed and yelled. But the polar bear at that point was just as freaked out as I was and he took off and dove back into the ocean," he describes.

Sometimes it was so cold, Kazlowski could only leave his tent for 10 minutes at a time to capture the shots.

But his pictures also tell the story of warming and of thinning, disappearing ice.

"I've been seeing the ice that used to be there through September and October, icebergs and what have you, is no longer there and we just see completely open water," he says.

As the ice pulls away, Kazlowski says 90 percent of the polar bears go with it, winding up 300 miles offshore.

"It's possible it could break up and dump them into the ocean, at which point you could see lots of bears drowning.

"The 10 percent that go to land have to scavenge and wait for the ice to freeze back up, which is becoming later and later now."

Steven Kazlowski worries about the polar bears and their ability to survive on the shrinking ice.

And he hopes when you look at his pictures, you'll worry too, and that worry will turn into change.

The exhibit, "The Last Polar Bear: Facing the Truth of a Warming World" will be at the Burke Museum through the end of the year.

Then it goes on a nationwide tour.
 
:( Hope soon will become colder and icey??? :fingersx:

not for another couple decades. the damage's already been done. even if we all start going "green" today for 5 years - ice won't be coming back anytime soon. that is very sad to think about.... :(
 
Oh man that is so sad. I hope someont will find solve the problem and take care of the situation.
 
sad that north pole will be more like melt whole thing. That leave no home for Polar bear but learn how to live on actual land.
 
Yeah not only Polar Bears, but Penquin's population are suffering too because of climate and having difficulty searching for food. It's quite sad that this world animal population is losing significantly :(

I know Zoo is a way to help preserve some animals from going extinct, but unfortunately, they will never learn to live on their own as wild animals have their freedom. They depend on humans to feed them. As more human population booms, means more developments, and less free space for animals to roam. It's not looking good for those wild animals. :(
 
Yeah not only Polar Bears, but Penquin's population are suffering too because of climate and having difficulty searching for food. It's quite sad that this world animal population is losing significantly :(

I know Zoo is a way to help preserve some animals from going extinct, but unfortunately, they will never learn to live on their own as wild animals have their freedom. They depend on humans to feed them. As more human population booms, means more developments, and less free space for animals to roam. It's not looking good for those wild animals. :(

No its not, and truth is.... people should just accept it. Global warming is real and its happening and theres 6 billion people on the planet. Reversing the trend to prevent things such as these? Well first of all, that 6 billion people would have to work together to do its part in order to stabilize the enviornment before flipping the switch to reverse for the planet to be back on acceptable, normal levels. But reality sucks. Everyone has an agenda. And the fact is, you'll probaly never get all 6 billion to go in one direction, unless something horribly goes wrong that impacts the whole planet. Plus reversing everything now is like stopping a runaway freight train with your own 2 hands. It'll take a while to slow down, stop THEN start going the other direction. Just sad, but true.
 
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