dla
WKR
Glad that sow has been shot. My bet is that she is responsible for 4 attacks this year. She was teaching her cubs some very bad habits.
I see your argument, but what’s your thoughts on how you can walk right up to a 350 bull or 220 buck in a park/preserve/neighborhood but get within 1000 yards on the mountain and they see or smell you they ghost? Animals are incredibly smart and adaptable. They learned to fear humans over thousands of years of evolution and in very short order they become like pets in areas off limits to hunting. If a a boar grizzly bear sees two of his buddies get shot he is learning a lesson. To what degree? Neither of us know…I have to disagree with notion that "hunting will change bears attitudes/behavior/aggression". The almighty Jim Shockey is wrong. I actually find hilarity in that statement. Most bears already avoid human interaction. Think of the number of hunters that encounter bears, or have the potential to (close proximity) that are never attacked and on the flip side the bears actually run the opposite way.
We're talking about changing behavior that at a fundamental level is an evolutionary process that has happened over 100s or 1,000s of years. Bears are all of the sudden not going to defend kills, cubs or potentially charge when startled because we killed a tiny percentage of them? We aren't going to change bear behavior by shooting whatever the proposed number was a year (MT 7? ID 1? WY 22?).
Fear is also a learned response, and as said above we aren't killing sows with cubs (or intentionally). Once you get shot you're dead and therefore no more fear response.
I could see this being a reasonable line of thinking if we were going to try and decrease the population by 75%, but that is not and will not ever be the case going forward.
I have to disagree with notion that "hunting will change bears attitudes/behavior/aggression". The almighty Jim Shockey is wrong. I actually find hilarity in that statement. Most bears already avoid human interaction. Think of the number of hunters that encounter bears, or have the potential to (close proximity) that are never attacked and on the flip side the bears actually run the opposite way.
We're talking about changing behavior that at a fundamental level is an evolutionary process that has happened over 100s or 1,000s of years. Bears are all of the sudden not going to defend kills, cubs or potentially charge when startled because we killed a tiny percentage of them? We aren't going to change bear behavior by shooting whatever the proposed number was a year (MT 7? ID 1? WY 22?).
Fear is also a learned response, and as said above we aren't killing sows with cubs (or intentionally). Once you get shot you're dead and therefore no more fear response.
I could see this being a reasonable line of thinking if we were going to try and decrease the population by 75%, but that is not and will not ever be the case going forward.
Sucks for the hunters to be in that situation. Sucks even more for the dead bear. Double sucks for the 2 cubs which will most likely not make it to adulthood. Pretty much sucks all around. Needs to be a better balance #allowgrizzhunting
While I certainly don't disagree with lethal removal of problem bears- to me most of the above sounds like damage or human safety concerns where the respective state should be taking measures to kill the conflicting critter...which I don't think most of these hunting tag holders would be targeting.
Thank you for sharing Robby.
Maybe they’ll have an epic species show down with wolves and all our woes will resolve themselves.
There was a fatality in Baker's Hole this spring. Guy fishing stumbled onto a bear guarding a moose. MT FWP killed the bear when it charged them the following day.
Too many damn bears around those parts anymore.
sick. plenty of places to hunt if you don't want to del with "pain in the ass" bears.Scratch 3 bears from the pain in the ass list.
Neat plan, until you take a step back and realize that this same b*tch bear attacked a jogger and a mountain biker too. Should we just board up the whole area to all recreation? What about all the people that live there? Burn their houses and "relocate" the humans? Nah, just tip the mean bears over and move on with life. Simple, effective and easy.sick. plenty of places to hunt if you don't want to del with "pain in the ass" bears.