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Canadian man fired by oil firm for saving baby moose from bear

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Mark Skage Canadian man fired saving baby moose from black bear
Mark Skage Canadian worker fired by employer, AFD Petroleum for saving baby moose from black bear in the wild.
Mark Skage Canadian man fired saving baby moose from black bear
Mark Skage Canadian worker fired by employer, AFD Petroleum for saving baby moose from black bear in the wild.

Mark Skage Canadian man fired by employer, AFD Petroleum for saving baby moose from certain mauling by black bear in the wild. Ethical and moral dilemma. 

A Canadian man has claimed being fired from his job at a fuel supplier when he helped rescue a moose calf from a black bear who the oil employee feared would be set upon.

Mark Skage, who worked for AFD Petroleum Inc., was driving back from a job site when he saw the moose wandering on the side of the road in British Columbia, Canada on June 6.

As he pulled over and got out of his vehicle, the calf attempted to climb into his truck as Skage noticed a bear stalking the ‘few day old’ animal.

‘I couldn’t just leave her there’

‘There was a black bear 50 yards away from her just waiting,’ Skage said in a Facebook post.

‘I made a decision at the time after she kept (trying) to climb into the work truck that I couldn’t just leave her there. So I stuck her in the passenger side and drove to town to get her some help,’ Skage added.

Skage’s decision to bring the calf into his truck comes from his background as an outdoors adventurist despite knowing doing so was against the law.

‘I just couldn’t do it, in my heart. People can say all they want. I know as outdoorsmen, we talk about predator control. … Black bears are the number one predator for those calves. So I just thought, ‘Well, I can’t take care of the predator, but I guess maybe I can try and help out this little calf,” Skage told CBC News.

‘It is against the law to pick up wild animals off the road or from out in nature, anywhere. It is illegal to be in possession of wildlife and transport wildlife,’ he told the outlet.

Mark Skage Canadian man fired saving baby moose from black bear
Mark Skage Canadian man fired saving moose from black bear. Images via social media.

The reality of the wild – moose are food for black bears

With the calf riding in his truck, Skage called his supervisor and the local Conservation Officer about his predicament before he named the moose Misty and found a rehab center to look after her until she was ready to be released.

‘A few days later Misty (that’s what I called her) got a ride to a rehab center a little farther south where they will let her grow up a bit before releasing her back into the wild,’ his post read.

Skage thought all would pass only to discover his employer, AFD Petroleum taking exception with his wildlife rescue.

‘All is well right? NOPE. AFD felt different and figured I was in grievous conflict with their wildlife policies. (they had never taken the time to know my background),’ he said.

Both the black and grizzly bear, along with wolves, are large predators of moose calves in Interior Alaska and Northern Canada and make up a large portion of calf deaths.

‘Black bears have been found to be the most important predator of moose calves in some areas of Alaska where grizzly bears are uncommon. In these areas, black bears killed about 40% of all moose calves that were born. Most predation was by adult males,’ according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

‘Anyway to wrap up they did decide given all their options that letting me go was the best thing. So the lesson I learned was AFD is ok spilling fuel on the ground but not helping wildlife,’ Skage concluded.

The AFD condemned Skage’s rescue, saying he should’ve called the conservation officer and allowed trained wildlife officials to handle relocate the wild animal. 

‘Instead of reporting the situation to a conservation officer and allowing the authorities to handle the rescue and relocation of the moose, the individual made the independent decision to transport an uninjured moose calf, a wild animal, in the front seat of his company vehicle for many hours,’ said AFD Petroleum president Dale Reimer according to CBC.

‘This not only put the employee and other road users at risk but also potentially caused distress and harm to the moose.’

Social media responds

And then there were these comments on social media that caught this author’s attention. See what you think?

Too many of us would have done the same thing. Hopefully, he’ll be hired by a company that values his background.

You can see this Company can’t set a precedent here, which would allow others to do the same thing in future.

I agree with the company. Humans should stop interfering with nature. The bear obviously went hungry. As cute as the baby moose is, nature dictates and provides it as a source of food in the predators’ food chain. It’s just a fact we can’t change and neither should we try to.

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