eli425
FNG
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2023
- Messages
- 95
Man, I think you are right. I was out there at various times throughout the season, hitting spots where I've seen them before, and absolutely nothing. Couldn't quite pin down what was causing it. Tried to rationalize the weather/season etc, but this makes the most sense.If you weren't seeing bears in idaho last spring... it wasn't the weather or snow to blame. It's the influx of hunters. The bears are seeing too many people, so they just aren't moving around during daylight hours like they used to.
Between the beginning of April and the end of June, I hit over a half dozen major trailheads, and a dozen more non-trailhead locations. Every one had more rigs than any year prior. A few had as many as 30 vehicles in locations that just a few years ago would have only had 2 or 3 rigs. And don't think that just going in deeper is the fix... I found hunters back in the knarliest places, many miles from the trailhead, and everywhere in between.
Best bet if you are going to do it anyway, is go where there aren't any rigs parked... and do your best to deduce whether other guys were there a day or week earlier. If they were, then move on. Pick spots between major roads and major trailheads... don't go all the way to the trailhead.
I'm thinking this year to try really getting in deeper into 39 using my dirt bike. Has anyone been down those trails east of the river coming out of Arrowrock? Not sure how serious/technical those trails would be for an average dirt bike rider.