EYJONAS!
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2017
- Messages
- 6,714
Looks like a cinnamon sow to me.
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Looks like a cinnamon sow to me.
Shit that's a solid montana blackie......... kinda like a 125 mule deer 4 pointer. Click. BOOMAll 85lbs of her lol
sbhooper, glad you were able to escape your situation as well.
Actually, my dad's family is from the Ten Sleep area, having homesteaded in the early days............
There is actually an old picture of some family members in the 30s up on the mountain. It was a summer camping trip and my grandma was there. Actually, another forum member's family is also in the picture. On the trip one of the guys found a black bear and got it with our families old Winchester 95 in 30-40 Krag.
Seeing the grizzlies come back to the Bighorns would bring some challenges, but it would definitely be cool.
Personally I enjoyed hunting the Big Horns without the constant need to watch for grizzlies for a change. Plenty of places in Mt and WY already to experience hunting grizzly country if desired.
All fair points and I do believe hunters would adapt, however if reintroduced I would hope population controls would have finally been put in place. (I thought the ranchers in the basin have already stated their position, Isn’t it the current buffer zone)? As to the brook trout that is fun fishery. The Big Horns are pretty special...That is fair, but it is a personal preference. I could turn it around and say I would prefer there was grizzlies in the Big Horns so there would be less demand for the elk tags I want. There is a lot of areas in the west that have lots of elk and don't have grizzlies, so it isn't like people are hurting for choices for areas to hunt.
But I don't know if the kinda minor sporting preferences of non-resident hunters should matter a ton when considering the conservation of native species. If grizzly bears came to that side of the basin, eventually hunters would adapt to the new normal. Actual biological considerations and potential landowner conflicts should matter more in my opinion. You would have to get some sort of buy in from the local landowners, which I think would be tough. I remember reading about Game and Fish meeting where a lot of residents of Cody were up in arms about removing brook trout from a local creek and putting the native yellowstone cutthroat back in. That is a pretty insignificant change in the grand scheme of things. The difference between no grizzlies and grizzlies is a much bigger change.
Honestly, I would love to see G-bears reintroduced into Colorado... so I'm kinda with Yvon on this one.
Interesting. I was told by someone last year where I hunted in CO that there was a boar grizzly roaming around in the area but that he mostly hung out on the edge of RMNP. The story included a personal sighting of the near during a horse ride several miles back away from any roads. I have no way to validate this, but it did make me a bit more aware of my surroundings as I was hunting solo last year. It is certainly something I’ll be following as long as I’m hunting out west…which will hopefully be for many more years.Fiction... For now. They're cute and cuddly - same as those wolves.
Care of the very scientific based organization, The Center for Biological Diversity;
and of course, their campaign (funded in part by Patagonia)