Southern Elk
Well-known member
I have a feeling that a bear or two is going to get shot in that area during rifle season.
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Agree and if you awaken a sleeping griz as you sneak through dense timber, he is not going to be aware of a hunting season or even care if you are packing a big hog leg pistol, he is going to react instinctively and punish you for entering his bedroom and startling him.It would likely have no bearing whatsoever on this recent uptick of attacks. 1) Hunting bears isn’t likely to alter population behaviors at all and 2) this population wouldn’t likely be slated as one to hunt.
That sure would be a shame! Again sarcasm .I have a feeling that a bear or two is going to get shot in that area during rifle season.
Who says risk needs to be reduced?
A Grizzly season would likely make zero difference. They come to gunshots, or are generally unfazed by them.
Anyone who actually thinks that you can change the behavior of hundreds of bears by hunting a half dozen of them is seriously kidding themselves.
Hell, they have shot two of them this week.
I agree, they shouldn't be on the list, but this is the new normal.
Having looked into the eyes of a lotta' G Bears just before they died, usually because they were being G Bears where humans were, I do have sympathy for the poor bastards.
Having seen dead sows' cubs languishing in a culvert trap parked in a garage for days while gubmint slackers work feverishly to find a barred and cement lifetime home for 'em, I do have sympathy for 'em.
Having seen and chatted with a guy with rods, wires and pins holding his ripped up arm together after it got tore up by a G Bear (just down the hill from where Ive shot a cow elk and had to retrieve a portion the following AM), I have sympathy for someone who gets the G Bear treatment.
Having reduced to a bunch of biological and forensic samples, a skull, and a hide, a G bear involved in a human attack - I have a little sympathy for both parties.
Actually, maybe I'd call it more empathy. Something a lotta' people don't get.
View attachment 115530
And here's a pic of the general area where the recent run-ins occurred. It's located 20 some miles from the nearest paved road, with virtually no human habitation. Only visitation. And that during about 5 months of the year. I've spent time in nooks and crannies of this country that few have ever seen. Except maybe the Peruvian sheep herders I had shared a cup of OJ with. Or maybe some other idiot looking for a stray westslope cutthroat...... That country's personal to me.
It always has been G Bear habitat. It may have been relatively unoccupied for a time - I think it's cool they're back.
To be clear, I do strongly support a G Bear hunting season - as a management and long term bear conservation tool - not to make us all safer out there.
But as already mentioned, with the growth in hunting pressure, as well as the uptick in general recreation - two summers ago I had to drive through a backcountry bike race on Monument Ridge - this is the "new normal".
And yes, there are indeed more bears. But they will lose in the long run.
HT'ers will hafta' find something to replace the "best sidearm for bear" topic.............
That's what bear spray is for. By wounding it he made the situation much more dangerous for the next person that comes across the bear.Yeah, I get the point, but at the same time, it's kind of hard to blame a guy for poking a hole in a bear that's chewing on him.
That's what bear spray is for. By wounding it he made the situation much more dangerous for the next person that comes across the bear.
It's one thing to be a quick-draw pistolero and an accurate shooter, but facing an angry large predator ... bear or otherwise ... just might diminish skills a tad ... and with a pistol, a "tad" is a miss!It happens, just part of being in the same part of the world where they exist.
The only story I read is on this post. It said he fired several shots ? At the bear ? He missed ? In the air ? maybe there is more info in a different story.
We have the right to protect ourselves and if I had the time for "several" shots, I think there would have been a dead bear. But the story posted here may not be telling us the whole story.
Also, "hunting bears" in the area will not keep this from happening in the future. At least that is our experience, maybe you guys have smarter bears
Having looked into the eyes of a lotta' G Bears just before they died, usually because they were being G Bears where humans were, I do have sympathy for the poor bastards.
Having seen dead sows' cubs languishing in a culvert trap parked in a garage for days while gubmint slackers work feverishly to find a barred and cement lifetime home for 'em, I do have sympathy for 'em.
Having seen and chatted with a guy with rods, wires and pins holding his ripped up arm together after it got tore up by a G Bear (just down the hill from where Ive shot a cow elk and had to retrieve a portion the following AM), I have sympathy for someone who gets the G Bear treatment.
Having reduced to a bunch of biological and forensic samples, a skull, and a hide, a G bear involved in a human attack - I have a little sympathy for both parties.
Actually, maybe I'd call it more empathy. Something a lotta' people don't get.
View attachment 115530
And here's a pic of the general area where the recent run-ins occurred. It's located 20 some miles from the nearest paved road, with virtually no human habitation. Only visitation. And that during about 5 months of the year. I've spent time in nooks and crannies of this country that few have ever seen. Except maybe the Peruvian sheep herders I had shared a cup of OJ with. Or maybe some other idiot looking for a stray westslope cutthroat...... That country's personal to me.
It always has been G Bear habitat. It may have been relatively unoccupied for a time - I think it's cool they're back.
To be clear, I do strongly support a G Bear hunting season - as a management and long term bear conservation tool - not to make us all safer out there.
But as already mentioned, with the growth in hunting pressure, as well as the uptick in general recreation - two summers ago I had to drive through a backcountry bike race on Monument Ridge - this is the "new normal".
And yes, there are indeed more bears. But they will lose in the long run.
HT'ers will hafta' find something to replace the "best sidearm for bear" topic.............
I will not criticize anyone for their method of deterrent in a moment of high stress and no time. It may simply be dictated by which hand is free at the moment (ie not carrying a bow) or more likely it will revert to your dominant hand and what is easiest for that hand to grab at the moment. Almost every account of a bear attack cites the speed at which it happens. One will not get the opportunity to think, oh, I should use bear spray so the next guy this bear might come across is safer.
As for the efficacy of spray vs pistol, I think it comes down to this. Bear spray is probably less effective but much easier to get on target. Pistols are probably more effective but harder to get on target. It comes down to personal skill and preference.