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Thread: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no go?

  1. #11
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    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    Props for the patience and the class to wait it out. True outdoorsman and hunter. Education and experience is priceless and you proved it. Hopefully others take note, congrats on getting the other bear

  2. #12
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    Oct 2012
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    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    Quote Originally Posted by whitlers View Post
    good eyes! I commend you for taking your time.
    x2................

  3. #13
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    Dec 2016
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    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    I watched a sow for over an hour last year before her cubs appeared from a hole in the grass behind her. Good job making sure the sure the situation was proper. It wouldn't feel good knowing you killed 3 or 4 bears for impatience...

  4. #14
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    Sep 2011
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    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    Excellent lesson in patience and being sure of what you are shooting. I was going to guess that she had the wrong species of ticks on her for you to harvest and continue the experiment lols. Question, what about a broken sapling would indicate a boar and not any other bear or large ungulate in the area, or do you just know the area that well?
    Very educational Caddis
    Thanks for posting

  5. #15
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    Aug 2010
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    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    Quote Originally Posted by Linksman313 View Post
    Excellent lesson in patience and being sure of what you are shooting. I was going to guess that she had the wrong species of ticks on her for you to harvest and continue the experiment lols. Question, what about a broken sapling would indicate a boar and not any other bear or large ungulate in the area, or do you just know the area that well?
    Very educational Caddis
    Thanks for posting
    Lol @ the tick species! Haha that is gold.

    The sapling... very cool moment. I actually smelled it before I saw it... very potent like a crate of car fresheners. I looked over and saw the poor sapling and it was oozing moisture and had a few black hairs on it.

    Boars typically do this in the spring to announce their presence to potential mates and competitors. Sows will snap the top off of saplings and claw up trees as well, but that generally happens in the fall and I believe it is related to denning.

    I know that in my area when the sapling start to get snapped in the spring, there is a boar who is saying it's his spot and there will be other boars saying no-no it's my spot... that's when I know my services as a mediator are about to be needed.

    Seeing this sapling oozing fresh, all the discouragement about my weekend with the sow went away. I knew it was boar time it was game on. That said, I sat for two hours in a feeding area, then nothing (I guess he was waiting for me to leave) ... then I stop to take a picture of the sapling and hear him snap a stick. Walked back in and watched up for a good 40 mins laying prone with the shooting stick (making sure its a boar, then procrastinating about being solo and having to be back for mothers day dinner, doing the sow a favor and taking the boar home) ... couldn't shake the temptation.

    Goes to show though... more times than not, I bust bears by smell or hearing. 60% smell first, 30% hear first and 10% see first (sow I smelled first then heard then saw the first night and heard first the second night) with the boar, I smelled the sapling first then heard him. Keeping the nose and ears open are huge.
    Last edited by caddisguy; 06-12-2017 at 07:07 PM.

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
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    North Shore
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    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    Quote Originally Posted by caddisguy View Post
    At one point she was just staring at me all hunched up, grass hanging out of her mouth, no neck at all... looked just little a blob. Noteworthy tip. Thanks for that.

    Second night as I was walking away to go back to camp, she bolted a few yards towards me then off in the timber. I was confused and 99% sure it wasn't about me at all. I think that was the boar moving in.

    Had a moment like that where something didn't feel right. The bear had me pegged and it didn't leave the treeline but a few feet and walk back and forth, back and forth. I was pretty far away to be a danger but once winded it seemed like odd behaviour, almost like making its mind if I was a danger or not, or if the cubs should be called in or not.

    Never seen the cubs, but I was 100% sure they were right in the treeline. My gut was telling me so, and I trust my gut, it knows better.
    Reason is not automatic. Those who deny it cannot be conquered by it.

    Ayn Rand



  7. #17
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Vancouver BC
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    696

    Re: Watched this bear a couple hours, 2 consecutive evenings. Guesses why it's a no g

    On a kill?

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