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Keith
Sutton
15601 Mountain Dr.
Alexander, AR 72002
501-847-9643
catfishdude@sbcglobal.net
The
Basics of Black Bear Hunting
by Keith Sutton
American black bears live only in North America. These
familiar bruins are primarily woodland animals,
occupying forests as far north as forests grow in Alaska
and Canada and as far south as Florida and northern
Mexico.
When Europeans began settling the New World, they
converted many forests to farms, and black bears were
eliminated from large portions of their original range.
Populations experienced a resurgence during the latter
half of the twentieth century, however, as people
abandoned marginal farmland and let it revert to forest.
At the same time, human attitudes toward black bears
improved as more was learned about them. The last bounty
on black bears was removed in 1965.
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“Black bear hunting is better
now than it has been at any point in recent history,” says
Brian Bachman, founder and President of the North American
Bear Foundation. “Conservation efforts and management
programs have been very effective in restoring the black
bear. Populations are increasing and ranges are being
expanded in most areas. This is being reflected in record
numbers of bears taken and also in the sizes of bears being
harvested.” |
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Today, black bears are managed as prized game animals in
at least 28 states with huntable populations. States
with the largest populations include Alaska, with
100,000 black bears; Washington, 25,000; Oregon, at
least 25,000; Maine, 20,500-21,500; Minnesota, 20,000;
California, 18,000-23,000; Idaho, 12,000-20,000;
Wisconsin, 14,000; Michigan, 12,000; Montana,
10,000-15,000; and Colorado, 8,000-12,000.
You can improve your chances of bagging a bruin by
following some basic guidelines. If you’re new at this
game, you should first study several good books on bear
hunting, research the sport on the Internet and/or pick
the brain of a veteran hunter. The more tricks you have
up your sleeve, the better your chances for success.
Space limitations allow only a cursory explanation of
basic bear hunting techniques here.
You’ll
also need to do some research to pinpoint good hunting
areas. Harvest statistics available from state wildlife
agencies can help you find public hunting areas or
counties with a healthy bear population. Then it’s a
matter of homing in on good bear habitat and looking for
sign.
In the mountains, bears like to move around near bluffs.
Wooded stream bottoms also are attractive, as are
clearcuts. Studies of bear stomach contents show their
most important autumn food is acorns, hence a large
number of sightings in oak/hickory woodlands and mixed
stands of hardwoods and pines. The next most significant
foods were pokeberries and leaves, which grow in forest
openings. Other significant bear foods include hickory
nuts, persimmons, insects and carrion.
Spend as much time as possible scouting for signs of
bear activity in the area you intend to hunt. Look for
some of the food sources mentioned above, take note of
their location and check them daily to see if they've
been visited. Watch for bear tracks around watering
holes. Large, soft black droppings full of seeds and
acorn shells also are an indicative sign. Droppings
often are found on logs, along with hair left when bears
sun themselves. A bear meandering along a stony outcrop
often leaves a trail of overturned rocks where it
searched for insects. Bears sometimes scar tree trunks
with their teeth and claws, another sign that can help
bear hunters locate a promising area.
When hunting, remember that bears have keen senses of
hearing and smell, and are highly attuned to anything
out of place in their environment. To prevent a bear
from winding you, try one of the products deer hunters
use to mask or eliminate human odor. Some hunters
actually use the bear's sense of hearing to their
advantage by using predator calls that imitate injured
rabbits. Bears sometimes are attracted to these.
Some hunters sit on a stand, waiting for a bear to come
to them, but because a bear may roam over many square
miles, some successful hunters say it is best to cover
lots of ground, moving slowly and quietly as you might
do if you were still-hunting for squirrels.
Selecting the right weapon for bear hunting is
important, and knowing how to skillfully use it is even
more important. Most experts recommend rifles .30
caliber or larger. Black-powder hunters have excellent
success with 370-grain maxi-balls propelled by eighty to
one hundred grains of FFG powder. Bowhunters shouldn’t
use anything lighter than a 50-pound bow, and even
presharpened broadheads should be honed to a perfect
razor edge to penetrate bears' thick hide, fat and
muscle.
Knowing where to shoot a bear also is important.
Broadside and head-on shots are the preferred choices
for gun hunters. A bruin hit in the shoulder blade area
won't travel far. For head-on shots, aim for the center
of the chest.
The best shot for archers is not a broadside shot, but
one where the animal is angling slightly away. Try to
place the arrow just behind the nearest shoulder, midway
between back and belly. This gives a clear shot at the
vital area without interference from the front leg or
shoulder. Broadside shots behind the shoulder blade will
also kill.
A bear's heavy fat layer prevents free external
bleeding, making it difficult to track. For this reason,
many bowhunters use a string tracking device. Available
from archery suppliers, each consists of a spool of
thread with the end attached to the arrow and the spool
attached to the bow. The line plays out as the game
flees, leaving a clear trail to follow.
When you find a downed bear, approach it cautiously. If
possible, approach the animal's rear from uphill. If the
bear isn't dead and is aroused, it's most likely to
lunge forward and head downhill. If the bear shows any
sign of life, finish it with a well-placed shot.
Bagging a bear is challenging, but most ardent bear
hunters prefer it that way. To them, that obvious degree
of difficulty is the reason for hunting. The hunt is a
success whether they kill a bear or not, because they’ve
faced the challenge and tried.
Still, the chance of success is always there. And every
bear hunter hopes that maybe, just maybe, this will be
their year to bag a bruin, one of North America’s most
magnificent and storied game animals.
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