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Rapid City Journal, April 3,
2003
by Kevin Woster, Journal Staff
Writer
RAPID CITY
-- It turned out that Tori Amos couldn't make it to Bear Country
U.S.A. on Wednesday to see this year's crop of black bear cubs.
But she sent a perfectly qualified stand-in - her 2-1/2-year-old
daughter, Natashya.
Amos, a pop singer, pianist and songwriter, performed Wednesday
night at Rushmore Plaza Civic Center. Earlier in the day, she
accepted an invitation by Sean Casey, one of the owners of Bear
Country, to come see the cubs.
But Amos changed her plans when she got an invitation to visit the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and the Wounded Knee site, which is
prominent in Amos' latest album.
The cubs at Bear Country still got plenty of attention from
Natashya, a chatty child with a fetching British accent and an
obvious passion for Bear Country creatures great and small.

"I
want the red one," she said, peering down into a box at a cub
with a red ribbon around its neck.
Natashya got to pet several of the 16 cubs born last January at Bear
Country. She also got a close-up gander at a bobcat and several
raccoons kept in cages nearby.
Her comfort around animals comes from living with her mom and dad on
a country place in southern England, her nanny, Rose Walker, said.
"She lives on a farm, so she knows animals," Walker said.
Walker kept track of Natashya as she joined Sean Casey's 3-year-old
son, Grant, in the Bear Country frolic. They then went on to see
Mount Rushmore with Karim Merali, general manager of Radisson Hotel.
Tori Amos and her family arrived at the Radisson on Wednesday
morning and were scheduled to spend the night there after her
performance. Shortly after their arrival, they met Sean Casey, who
issued the invitation for the cub visit.
At 16, this year's batch of cubs is down significantly from last
year's total of 25 and especially from previous annual production
that had soared to as high as 80.
Bear Country could barely handle that many cubs, so the attraction
began a system of birth-control techniques to curb reproduction.
"We were having way too many for a while there," Sean
said. "The birth-control plan is working."
Still, there are plenty of cubs to maintain the Bear Country
population - and to entertain a little girl with a big-name mom.
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...Featured picture was not included in the original
article.
...Contact Kevin Woster at 394-8413
or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com
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