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In the record of the Rocky Mountains, there have been numerous grizzly bears that roamed the mountains and fields. There was one such grizzly bear whose narrative has been told at numerous campfires to apprehensive young scouts who want to identify about Old Ephraim. Grizzly bear as well bit off a six inch aspen limb in immediately one sink your teeth into, which was nine feet and eleven inches advanced than the position. He was the smartest and strongest Grizzly bear anyone had still encountered.
Grizzly bear even broke the back of a cow with just one blow of his enormous paw. Since of this one Grizzly bear, sheep owners had a tough time hiring men to tend their sheep. When he saw how numerous sheep and other animals were being slaughtered by Old Three Toes, he made it his goal to trap the old Grizzly bear. One evening, he heard the roar of the Grizzly bear and when he went to the pond, the sight of the huge Grizzly bear took his breath away. The Grizzly bear measured at right nine feet and eleven inches tall, and weighed 1100 pounds. A few weeks after he was killed, a Boy Scout Troop dug up the skull of the bear and sent it to the Smithsonian Institute to document what kind of bear it was and found that it was indeed a Grizzly bear.
The research about this Grizzly bear was intriguing to me because all had heard about Old Ephraim for years. After reading about the Grizzly bear from a pamphlet named Old Ephraim written by Newell J. Crookston (1959), it is decided to put jointly a historical fiction novel with Old Ephraim as part of the story, using every bit of the information gleaned from this little pamphlet. Parents and grandparents retell this exciting tale to the youth, recounting the ten foot Grizzly bear that wreaked so much disaster on the communities.