(Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times)
As they do every spring, the bears of the Eastern Sierra Nevada are now clawing their way out of dens after their five-month-long winter naps, tearing through layers of ice and snow with little air to breathe and no water to drink.They can't afford to stop because they haven't eaten since late October, when they entered their dens for the brutal Sierra winter, usually by burrowing into north-facing slopes.
As they do every spring, the bears of the Eastern Sierra Nevada are now clawing their way out of dens after their five-month-long winter naps, tearing through layers of ice and snow with little air to breathe and no water to drink.They can't afford to stop because they haven't eaten since late October, when they entered their dens for the brutal Sierra winter, usually by burrowing into north-facing slopes.
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