TWILIGHT PATRIARCH - THE BOSS
I’ve never been drawn to celebrity. Generally I lean away from it, often finding more to admire in the antihero. Yet The Boss, Banff’s most famous grizzly, holds a presence that’s impossible to ignore.
Over the years, he has become a symbol of change in Banff’s landscape, embodying both wild power and the shifting nature of how we engage with it.
It has never been easy to share photographs of him as fame brings crowds. And with the crowds, the wild becomes something else that is less a space of reverence and more about spectacle.
I have seen him surrounded, boxed in by people hoping for a glimpse, a photo, a moment. It is no longer about appreciating a grizzly in its element; it’s about securing a trophy photo.
My first encounter with him was nearly twenty years ago, while biking the Pipestone Trail near Lake Louise. We met in a quiet meadow where he was sprawled in the grass, calmly eating dandelions, completely unfazed by me. When he stood to move, you could feel his presence was unlike any other.
Since then, we have crossed paths hundreds of times. We share the same trails and the same seasons. Initially, when sharing sightings of him with guests, those encounters always carried weight. But as his reputation grew, the focus shifted. People came to see The Boss, not just a bear. The search for a wild connection became a search for a specific name, face, and photo.
This is happening everywhere. The pursuit of a checked box is replacing the pursuit of experience.
The title ‘Twilight Patriarch’ reflects where he is now. Nearing the end of his era after shaping much of the genetic legacy of Banff’s grizzly population. He has lived a life here, in this ‘wilderness’, and for me has been part of my own.







