Early in April, in the middle of my Sunday afternoon nap (observing the 11th commandment: Thou Shalt Nap on Sundays) my brother called to tell me about the possibility of getting to go to Alberta on a Black Bear adventure. He warned me to not get my hopes up, as the circumstances of this trip were very iffy.
Daniel works in D.C. and gets to meet movers and shakers on a regular basis. Sometimes these bigwigs will offer to take Daniel hunting once they learn that he loves outdoors adventures. Sadly, most of the time an offer to go is as far as it goes, with the person making the offer almost always failing to follow up on the offer and make concrete plans.
Daniel told me he recently had met "Fred", and this guy loved going to northern Alberta for spring bears, and in the fall also goes to southern Alberta for monster whitetails. Over the years, "Fred" has taken lots of people over the border, and now he told Daniel that there was a great chance to go bear hunting. Uncharacteristically "Fred" followed up with a couple of texts, so Daniel made the phone call to me letting me know that "Fred" was so serious, that he was going to cover all of Daniel's expenses once he arrived at the jump off spot, and wanted to have Daniel invite a brother or hunting buddy.......which was ME!!
One small issue....my passport was expired, so you can bet your sweet bippy that I scheduled an appointment with the US Postal service to get my expedited service rolling.
Meeting our host in Edmonton, we soon discovered that the touring bus with toy hauler was full of "Fred's" family and other business associates, so introductions were made and new names/faces memorized. We had one more Edmonton stop to make, as "Fred" wanted to go see his latest purchases. A new form of transportation based on Russian/Ukrainian military vehicles that can move about the far northern un-roaded swampy areas that even Argos do not dare to travel.
https://sherpatv.com/
Moving towards Zama City, which would serve as our base of operations, we arrived to meet Steve Overguard, the outfitter who owned the non-resident bear and moose permits for the far northwest corner of Alberta. His hunting area covers over 30,000 square miles, so we were virtually assured that besides our party, we would not see another hunter.
Monday afternoon rolled around, and Daniel and I were introduced to Byron Wolf, who would be our guide for the duration of the trip (As non-resident aliens, Alberta requires us to have a guide or "resident guide" to hunt big game). The outfitter runs around 60 bait sites, with miles separating each site. Byron had been keeping nearly a dozen bait sites going this spring, with trail camera pictures showing multiple bears hitting his sites daily. He decided to take us to our first assigned stand as predicted rainy conditions later in the week would make it very difficult to get to the trail leading into the woods, and even tougher to 4 wheel a bear out on the two track if one was killed.
Personal pics of stand #1 Monday (nine bears that night), and stand #2 Tuesday (wolverine and 4 bears that night with a 7'2" squared black phase who will come home to live with me) to follow, as although I'm feeling like I'm on northern Alberta time, it is bedtime for sure.
Jim Burnsworth has a video of his 2017 big black bear from the same outfitter. (This link is not the one showing him walking into the hunting site only to find a bear sitting in his treestand)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlf3Th4y9HI&feature=player_embedded
Daniel works in D.C. and gets to meet movers and shakers on a regular basis. Sometimes these bigwigs will offer to take Daniel hunting once they learn that he loves outdoors adventures. Sadly, most of the time an offer to go is as far as it goes, with the person making the offer almost always failing to follow up on the offer and make concrete plans.
Daniel told me he recently had met "Fred", and this guy loved going to northern Alberta for spring bears, and in the fall also goes to southern Alberta for monster whitetails. Over the years, "Fred" has taken lots of people over the border, and now he told Daniel that there was a great chance to go bear hunting. Uncharacteristically "Fred" followed up with a couple of texts, so Daniel made the phone call to me letting me know that "Fred" was so serious, that he was going to cover all of Daniel's expenses once he arrived at the jump off spot, and wanted to have Daniel invite a brother or hunting buddy.......which was ME!!
One small issue....my passport was expired, so you can bet your sweet bippy that I scheduled an appointment with the US Postal service to get my expedited service rolling.
Meeting our host in Edmonton, we soon discovered that the touring bus with toy hauler was full of "Fred's" family and other business associates, so introductions were made and new names/faces memorized. We had one more Edmonton stop to make, as "Fred" wanted to go see his latest purchases. A new form of transportation based on Russian/Ukrainian military vehicles that can move about the far northern un-roaded swampy areas that even Argos do not dare to travel.
https://sherpatv.com/
Moving towards Zama City, which would serve as our base of operations, we arrived to meet Steve Overguard, the outfitter who owned the non-resident bear and moose permits for the far northwest corner of Alberta. His hunting area covers over 30,000 square miles, so we were virtually assured that besides our party, we would not see another hunter.
Monday afternoon rolled around, and Daniel and I were introduced to Byron Wolf, who would be our guide for the duration of the trip (As non-resident aliens, Alberta requires us to have a guide or "resident guide" to hunt big game). The outfitter runs around 60 bait sites, with miles separating each site. Byron had been keeping nearly a dozen bait sites going this spring, with trail camera pictures showing multiple bears hitting his sites daily. He decided to take us to our first assigned stand as predicted rainy conditions later in the week would make it very difficult to get to the trail leading into the woods, and even tougher to 4 wheel a bear out on the two track if one was killed.
Personal pics of stand #1 Monday (nine bears that night), and stand #2 Tuesday (wolverine and 4 bears that night with a 7'2" squared black phase who will come home to live with me) to follow, as although I'm feeling like I'm on northern Alberta time, it is bedtime for sure.
Jim Burnsworth has a video of his 2017 big black bear from the same outfitter. (This link is not the one showing him walking into the hunting site only to find a bear sitting in his treestand)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wlf3Th4y9HI&feature=player_embedded