Bear and honey. These two words are more closely associated in the minds of any person than oil and bread. As soon as you hear the word "bear," an image of a bear with a paw in a beehive with wild bees immediately comes to mind. Where did this stereotype come from? Are the brown lords of the forest really so fond of sweet delicacies? Or is this another fairy tale that people invented to explain the destroyed borders? Let's dig deeper — into the very essence of the bear's culinary weakness.
The tale of "Masha and the Bear" is irrelevant here. Since ancient times, hunters and foresters have noticed that bears destroy the nests of wild bees. With great delight, they eat both the insects themselves and their larvae, and of course, the golden combs. Honey is a calorie bomb. It is full of fructose and glucose, which are quickly absorbed. For an animal that needs to gain dozens of kilograms of fat before hibernation, such a find is a real feast. That's why the reputation of a "sweets lover" has stuck.
Contrary to cartoons, a bear does not look for a pot with the word "Honey" written on it. It relies on its sense of smell. The sense of smell of a brown bear is seven times sharper than that of a dog. It can smell a tree with a beehive from half a kilometer away. Then strength comes into play: the animal tears apart rotten wood as if it were cardboard. Bees, of course, protect their treasure, but their stings barely penetrate the thick skin and dense fur. Perhaps only in the nose or on the lips — then the bear cries and waves its head, but it does not give up the prey.
If you look at the bear's diet, honey is not the main dish, but rather a dessert. The basis is vegetarian food: roots, nuts, acorns, berries. In the spring, after emerging from the den, the hungry beast eats ants, carrion, and may attack hoofed animals. But as soon as the forest berries start to ripen — raspberries, bilberries, cranberries — the bear switches to them. They are also sweet, and they are much easier to obtain than combs with a swarm of angry bees. So honey is more like fast food for bears: very tasty, but not every day.
The expression "bear and honey" has firmly entered proverbs. "Not everyone's blin is a feast, but there will be honey for the bear" is about how even the strong have weaknesses. In Russian folk tales, the bear often goes after the smell of honey and falls into a trap. In the myths of the Komi-Permyaks, the bear is considered a deity, the guardian of beekeeping. In Europe, by the way, bears are also associated with sweets: just remember the plush Winnie the Pooh, who is trying to get into the hive with bees and then floats on a blue balloon.
The most famous propagator of bear-honey love is, of course, the English plush bear cub. His phrase "Can anyone think of anything else when your stomach is rumbling?" has become a classic. The Soviet "Winnie the Pooh" (the cartoon by Khityruk) also did not bypass the topic: the hero with a ball goes up to the hive, thinking that the clouds are bees. And in real movies, for example, in the movie "Bear" by Jean-Jacques Annaud, not only the drama of survival is shown, but also a scene of eating honey: the furry giant licks his paw with delight.
For a bear, going after honey is a risk. Bee stings to the face can cause swelling, close the eyes, and even lead to suffocation if the insects get into the mouth. There are cases when animals have died from anaphylactic shock. Moreover, wild bees settle high up, in the hollows of old trees. To get to the delicacy, the bear must climb to a great height or knock down a tree. A fall can break a leg. So the sweet life is often associated with risk.
Now there are fewer wild bees, but bears are more often visiting beehives. The smell of honey and wax attracts them for kilometers. For a beekeeper, a meeting with a bear is a catastrophe. One animal can overturn a dozen hives in one night, break frames, eat honey and larvae. People set up electric fences, make loud noises with scarecrows, but some bears become real recidivists. They are caught and relocated to remote forests, and sometimes even shot. So love for sweets becomes a cause of death.
Bear and honey are not just a cliché. It is an evolutionary strategy, a risky hunt for quick energy, a fragrant piece of wild nature. And as long as there are forests and bees on the planet, the bear robber will break into beehives smelling of honey. And we will watch this with a mix of horror and admiration.
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