Here is the grizz 5 minutes after the moose came through.
http://i296.photobucket.com/albums/m...pslmn8nssc.jpg
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Here is the grizz 5 minutes after the moose came through.
http://i296.photobucket.com/albums/m...pslmn8nssc.jpg
Great pics there CHB........
Interesting picture of this boar marking his territory.
http://i296.photobucket.com/albums/m...psfafhejwb.jpg
Magnificent share CHB!
Very cool pics .......
goes to show the amount of meat eaters with small areas ........and A huge part of any management plan ......
Unbelievable hillbilly.....that's a ton of competition in a few short miles. Must be some smart moose to survive that gauntlet of meat eaters everyday. Either that of just passing through, QUICKLY!!!
Was at the cabin in 6-04 for a week, saw 32 different bears, 2 sows had triplets one a pair and numerous others with just 1. Also saw the most cow moose at this time of year than i have seen in a few years, hardly any wolf sign like they have moved on. CO shot a sow grizz and her 2 cubs as she was teaching them how good the ranchers sheep were.
Wow CHB, you have a predator problem big time. That Grizz in your last pic is a monster! I suspect many areas in BC are like this. Pictures of all these grizzlies is why I'm arguing their populations are too high. There is no question that the grizzly hunt is sustainable. If this hunt ends then their populations will continue to grow, ungulate populations will decline, human conflicts will increase and sadly CO's will be shooting more...
I am with you on this....the changing landscape due to logging is probably the biggest factor...
and yes, it allows the preds to be more efficient.
Hard for a deer to get away when they fall thru the snow when levels are high, due to no old growth around anymore.
Or, they have to move elsewhere....just my thoughts.
Crazy good pics CHB.They gotta let out more Grizz LEH for that area.Seen a sow grizz with two cubs along the lake not that long ago.