
Grizzly bears can throw down some sweet dance relocations, as seen on this trail camera video footage from Alberta, Canada. In reality, the grizzly is scratching itself versus a tree, but doesn’t it look like it’s placing on a show?
The hilarious video modified by Aid Alberta Wildies Society (HAWS) shows a family of three grizzly bears, possibly a mom bear with 2 nearly grown cubs, strolling. 2 of the three bears walk past an ideal scratching post (a thin tree), but one bear simply can’t pass it up.
The young grizzly stops, stands up on 2 legs, and begins scratching its back versus the tree. It raises an arm up to hold on to a tree branch as it gyrates, shakes its head, wiggles its hips, and actually gets down to its own beat. HAWS modifies in some Latin music.
Though published to Facebook today, HAWS says the video is a “re-run”, and the trail web cam footage is from 2022. Enjoy a grizzly “dance” on a trail camera here:
HAWS’s main focus is wild horses, not grizzly bears, though the company’s path cameras seem to record all sort of species, consisting of not only horses and bears but also wolves and Canada lynx.
Grizzly bears can throw down some sweet dance relocations, as seen on this trail webcam video from Alberta, Canada. See it here.
