What species of bear is winnie the pooh?!


Question: I think the question refers to the specific bear Winnie the Pooh has been named from. He was based on a certain bear from I believe Winnipeg. Heres what I found on google. http://winnipeg.ca/Services/CityLife/Pla...


Answers: I think the question refers to the specific bear Winnie the Pooh has been named from. He was based on a certain bear from I believe Winnipeg. Heres what I found on google. http://winnipeg.ca/Services/CityLife/Pla...

a honey bear

a honey bear duh lol

he's a pooh bear, of course.

Teddy Bear

a cartoon one?? LOL

isnt he a honey bear???

A fictitious one?

a pooh Bear

How about... he's a cartoon bear...

honey bear

brown bear

A plump, yellow, Disney, honey bear! Im not sure!

Disney bear. Heh.

Kodiak pooh in a brown paper grocery sack.

obv. a grizzly.

Oh that is easy ... He is a honey bear full of LOVE and err um Honey.... Plus lots of cuteness`!

he is a member of the poohalippess family. they come from northern Alaska where honey is scarce. that's why he migrated

lol...im not really sure...a cute bear i guess!?

Actually, he's a black bear.

a honey bear i'd say...

He's a honey bear....

He's also the imagination of the small son (Christpher Robin) of the author, I doubt preschoolers really differentiate the bears when they're in pretend play.

Stufffed.

EVERYONE IS WRONG! its called a "sloth bear" Its occasionally referred as the "honey bear"

North American grizzly bear. Don't let the cuddly exterior fool ya, he's a carnivore.

Stuffed.

He is a Pooh bear, of course. LOL.

PB (Peanut Butter). That's why he's always looking for honey. Silly old bear.

pooh bear

An American black bear In August 1914, Lieutenant Harry Colebourn, a Veterinary Officer with the 34th Fort Garry Horse of Manitoba, was travelling by train from his home in Winnipeg to enroll in the Canadian Army Veterinary Corps in Valcartier, Quebec.

Travelling by Canadian Pacific Railway, he had to change trains at White River Bend in Ontario, where he noticed a man further along the station platform with an American black bear cub tied to the arm of the bench on which he was seated.

He struck up a conversation and, learning that the man was a trapper who had shot and killed the cub's mother, Colebourn offered him $20 for the young bear -- the trapper eagerly accepted the offer and the cub was taken to Quebec, where she became the mascot of the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade. In December 1914,the 2nd Brigade was preparing to move to France in great secrecy. Colebourn decided it was unsafe to take her into battle; so, while passing through London on the way to France on December 9th, 1914, he visited London Zoo and asked them to care for the cub until his return, which he optimistically anticipated would be no longer than two weeks.

Of course, that war to end all wars was not to end so quickly. It was not until 1918 that Colebourn returned safely to London. Realizing that the bear, now known affectionately by her keepers and visitors as Winnie, was happy and content in her new home, he decided to leave her there.

TaDa!!!...

This should get best answer !!

a honey bear



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