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One technical problem with the apps is the vast majority of Yellowstone doesn't have cellphone coverage. Also, it's not like anybody is going to persuade a moose, elk, or bald eagle to wait around for the next tourist to show up. On the other hand, a pack of wolves seen killing a bison might stick around for days while they fed on the meat, suggested Tom Mangelsen, a wildlife photographer who lives in Jackson Hole, just south of Yellowstone. "I imagine it would be helpful, certainly for tourists or people who aren't familiar with Yellowstone, and I suppose for people like me, too," Mangelsen said. Mangelsen counts himself among the many photographers and tourists who have been watching a popular grizzly in Grand Teton over the past few years. The grizzly recently emerged from hibernation with her three cubs
-- big news in Jackson Hole. Mangelsen said he didn't rush off to share the news online. "I haven't been on one of those websites more than three times in my life to see what's going on in Yellowstone," he said. "But I know people live by it." ___ Online: Where's a Bear app: http://bit.ly/IvVLlz Yellowstone Wildlife site: http://bit.ly/HGfwXo
[Associated
Press;
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