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Michigan bear had plastic lid stuck around neck for 2 years. Here’s how it got free

Bear had scarring on neck, but was otherwise healthy

A trail camera on private property in Hillman, Michigan, captured this photo of a black bear with a lid stuck on its neck. (Photo provided to Michigan Department of Natural Resources by Hillman resident)

HILLMAN, Mich. – A Michigan bear had a plastic lid stuck around its neck for two years, but now it had finally been freed of that burden.

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources first learned about the bear in 2023 after biologists at the Atlanta field office saw the bear with the lid stuck around its neck. At the time, the bear was a cub.

In this image provided by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, DNS staffers, from left, Angela Kujawa, Sherry Raifsnider and Miranda VanCleave work to remove a lid from the neck of an immobilized black bear near Hillman, Michigan, on June 3, 2025. ( Michigan Department of Natural Resources via AP)

Since then, the bear has occasionally been seen on trail cameras, but would disappear after about a day, according to the DNR.

Then, in May, a Hillman man saw the young bear on a trail camera on his wooded property.

He reported it to the DNR, and with his permission, they set up a trap and safely caught the bear on June 2.

Biologists said the bear had gotten its head stuck in a 5-inch hole in a blue plastic lid that appears to be from a 55-gallon drum.

These drums are used by landowners to store materials like chicken feed to attract bears and by hunters to bait bears, according to the DNR.

Baiting is a legal way for Michiganders to hunt bears, but the following rules are in place:

  • People can only use bait containers on private land
  • Holes in bait containers can only be 1 inch or less in diameter or 22 inches or greater in diameter
With the lid removed, the black bear showed significant scarring and an abscess on its neck but was otherwise healthy. (Michigan Department of Natural Resources)

The state wildlife biologists in Montmorency County anesthetized the bear and cut the lid off of it.

They learned that the bear weighs 110 pounds, which is typical for 2 years old.

In addition, they discovered that the bear had an abscess and scarring on its neck. Other than that, the bear appeared to be healthy.

The bear was then released back onto the property after the anesthesia wore off.

The DNR encourages landowners to recycle or crush empty food containers, like cheeseball tubs, and secure garbage to prevent this from happening to bears.

“Container openings of a certain size can result in bears and other wildlife getting their heads or other body parts stuck in them, leading to injury or death,” said Cody Norton, the DNR’s bear, furbearer and small game specialist. “It’s important to remember that the opening diameter is more important than the size of the container.”

In this image provided by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, wildlife biologist Angela Kujawa collects data from an immobilized black bear after a lid was removed from the animals neck near Hillman, Michigan, on June 3, 2025. ( Michigan Department of Natural Resources via AP)

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