Bear named ‘Oreo’ roams Monrovia in search of food — and snags namesake cookies
Whether it’s bears, coyotes or mountain lions, there is a sense in many of L.A.’s hillside communities that something four-legged and feral lurks just beyond the asphalt and attached garages.
And on Canyon Crest Drive in Monrovia, the residents know that they live in bear country.
Their street is frequented by California black bears coming down from the San Gabriel Mountains to scavenge for food. And one apparently has a particular craving: Oreos.
On Saturday, the bear visited a property on the foothill cul-de-sac and left holding a package of the Nabisco cookies in its mouth, earning it the name “Oreo,” KTLA reported.
Resident Vina Khoury told the television station that the animal’s presence has been unnerving. “He’s not just roaming around,” she said. “He’s actually going into the houses. So now, it’s a very scary thing to leave a window open or your backyard door open or anything.”
Sightings of the sweet-toothed Ursus americanus are almost ordinary on Canyon Crest, a stub of a suburban street dotted with swimming pools. The bear has also dined on a chocolate cake it found in a refrigerator at one house, KTLA reported.
A spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife said he had not received a report about the incident from an area specialist.
As spring turns to summer, black bears are known to venture deeper into residential communities in search of food. Humans’ endless encroachment on the natural habitat has led to an increase in encounters with the animals, omnivores especially adept at scavenging.
They may not be grizzlies — one hasn’t been seen in California in 100 years — but black bears aren’t always cute and cuddly. Hikers encountering a bear should avoid eye contact, make noise and back away slowly — while also making themselves look bigger, the state’s fish and wildlife department counsels. (“Yell, clap, use a whistle,” it says.)
A trail cam operated by photographer Johanna Turner captured a black bear in Angeles National Forest above Pasadena. The bear appears to be smiling.
“Most black bear ‘attacks’ are defensive actions if the animal is protecting cubs, becomes startled or scared,” the agency notes. “In some cases, a food conditioned, or habituated bear may become too bold and act aggressively towards people.”
Setting aside the specter of a mauling, social media users were impressed with “Oreo,” taking to X to unfurl a string of dad jokes about the animal’s gustatory predilections.
“Double stuffed?” one X user wondered.
“Thins to keep the figure,” another wrote, referencing the lighter version of the Nabisco treat.
Mondelēz International, the parent company of Nabisco, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Two men who rescued her as a cub are upset after she was seized by Oregon wildlife officials.
The Canyon Crest bear may have a shtick calibrated for social media stardom, but there’s plenty of competition among the Southland’s cast of charismatic — and potentially dangerous — wild animals.
In mid-May, there was an unconfirmed sighting of a mountain lion in Griffith Park. The return of one to the 4,000-acre park about a year and a half after the death of P-22, the celebrity animal that lived there for 10-plus years, would be a cause for celebration among some observers.
And The Times reported May 10 that a bear photographed in mountains above the San Gabriel Valley appeared to smile for the camera. Captured at night, the picture showed the animal climbing on a rocky outcropping.
In the distance, the lights of the Southland twinkled underneath a scrim of haze.
Imagine how many Oreos were out there.
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