Hercules the Bear - A Gentle Giant in the Family. Maggie Robin
CONTENTS
1 TITLE PAGE
2 DEDICATION
3 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
4 CHAPTER 1: GRIZZLY BEAR
5 CHAPTER 2: GRIZZLY ANDY ROBIN
6 CHAPTER 3: THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM
7 CHAPTER 4: GROWING TRUST
8 CHAPTER 5: KINGS OF THE RING
9 CHAPTER 6: STARRING ROLES
10 CHAPTER 7: BEAR ON THE LOOSE
11 CHAPTER 8: HOME AT LAST
12 CHAPTER 9: OUR CHANGING LIVES
13 CHAPTER 10: LET’S ALL GO STATESIDE!
14 CHAPTER 11: OUR JOURNEY BEGINS
15 CHAPTER 12: CALIFORNIA, HERE WE COME!
16 CHAPTER 13: OUR YEAR IN THE CITY OF ANGELS
17 CHAPTER 14: BACK HOME
18 CHAPTER 15: MOVING ON
19 CHAPTER 16: ‘FIND HELP, MAGGIE!’
20 CHAPTER 17: WORRYING TIMES
21 CHAPTER 18: UNCERTAIN FUTURE
22 CHAPTER 19: HOPEFUL SIGNS
23 CHAPTER 20: A SENSE OF DOOM
24 CHAPTER 21: OUR FINAL DAYS
25 PLATES
26 COPYRIGHT
This book is dedicated with affection and gratitude to the Islanders of Benbecula, and in memory of Mum and Dad; also in memory of our good friend Eddie Orbell, without whom this amazing adventure would not have been possible.
Throughout our life with Hercules we have been fortunate to have been involved with some very special people. I would like to acknowledge them for their kindness, wisdom, help and friendship.
Firstly, David Summnall of Middlechild Productions, with whom we entrusted Hercules’s story – thank you David.
My mum, dad and family, especially my sister Hazel and her family, who are always there for us.
My cousin John Maclean of North Uist and his family, who helped us enormously with the moving of Hercules to his final resting place.
My relatives and the islanders of Grimsay and North Uist for their friendship and support.
Roger Wheater, the former Director of Edinburgh Zoo.
Numerous friends and neighbours who took to living with a bear as the most natural thing in the world.
Our dear friend the late Sir Hugh Fraser for his boundless enthusiastic support.
The late Eddie Orbell of the Highland Wildlife Park, a man full of kindness and an immense love of animals.
Hercules’s fans and admirers who touched our subconscious mind and taught us to appreciate our fellow man.
Anne Logan, our kindest caring vet, who helped us through.
My heroes, local farmers David Johnman and Jimmy Patterson, always ready to help.
Martin Palmer and Toby Buchan at John Blake Publishing for believing in our story.
And finally, the British media, who treated Hercules and ourselves with respect.
MAGGIE ROBIN
Hercules lay sleeping as I wrote part of this with his head on my feet. Earlier he had been playing with the cushion which was peeping out from under his enormous bottom, occasionally tossing it into the air and catching it in his paws. I told him, ‘Uh-uh, not the cushion,’ and he looked at me as if to say, ‘Come on, Mum, what do you take me for?’, tucked it under his tummy and settled down to watch television.
It was a raw afternoon in November when I first started to write my book. The icy rain was coming down the Glen in great swaths of grey, battering against the old house. Andy had gone out to chop wood for the fire. He cut his logs a metre long and we put them straight into the enormous hearth blazing beside me. On days like that, when the fire was stacked high, it was useful to have someone like Hercules around to help me lift them.
The room, our sitting room, was probably very like your sitting room, with armchairs and sofa, TV and photos on the walls – an ordinary-sized room with ordinary objects. The house it was in, our home at that time, was the Sheriffmuir Inn, off a narrow back road that led to the A9, the main road to the north of Scotland. The Parish of Sheriffmuir – there isn’t really a village – is between Stirling and Dunblane.
When I looked out of the window here on a fine day there was no sign of humankind. The Ochil Mountains rose around us – a vanguard of the great mountains that form the centre of Scotland. We were on the edge of the old Highland Line, and the people round here would have spoken Gaelic in the old days. Further down the Glen the land was cultivated in small fields and there were plantations of pine trees. In front of the Inn, and on the other side of the road there was a fast-flowing burn, fed from the mountains, in which Andy and Hercules loved to play in the warm weather.
The house was over three hundred years old. It was here that the famous Battle of Sheriffmuir was fought on a misty November day in 1715; indeed, the Inn was used as the headquarters of the Earl of Mar, who led the Jacobite army. Mar and his Highlanders were trying to break through to join the Jacobites who had risen in the northwest of England, when they met the Duke of Argyll at the head of a disciplined army of Hanoverian troops. They fought all day in the mist and the Clan Macrae were slaughtered to a man. In the end there was no conclusive victor. Sometimes, on dark days, one can almost imagine the kilted clansmen moving down the hillsides with gory broadswords in their hands … If stones could speak the old Inn would have some strange tales to tell, but perhaps none stranger than the story I love to tell about the battle of wits between a man and a grizzly bear.
As I relaxed in front of the fire my thoughts drifted back to the day a young man, a stranger to us, came to the Inn to see for himself this bear called ‘Hercules’ that he had heard so much about. He had spent many years in the north of Canada and in the Arctic, and had seen bears in the wild – both grizzlies and their near cousin the polar bear.
Andy noted his enthusiastic interest and took him to meet Herc in his den, which he refused to come into and instead stood at the door incredulously repeating, ‘I don’t believe it; this can’t be real; I must be dreaming,’ while Herc kissed and cuddled his dad.
Years ago, he told us, when he was working in the north of Canada, he had joined the search party for a friend who had gone off alone on a fishing expedition. They found his tent and there were bears’ footprints in the snow all round it. In an instant they knew that their worst fears had been confirmed and he prayed that his friend had been knocked senseless by the first blow from the huge hungry creature that had found the camp. He refused to go to the actual spot where his friend had obviously ended his days. All that was found of him was some shreds of clothing, a belt buckle and his false teeth.
On