Like everyone else on here; I had lofty goals for the 2018 season - I was going to be that small fraction of guys that were successful in busy & overhunted OTC units. I was a rich man with 4 tags in my pocket; an early rifle season bear tag, an OTC 3rd season tag, a 4th season cow tag, and an OTC w/caps bear tag for the same area as my cow tag. With big bears and even bigger bulls on my brain, I spent most weekends throughout the summer hiking and fishing my way through possible areas to hunt.
Despite hundreds of miles covered, I didn't turn up a single bull and didn't find a bear until I was 1/2 mile from the truck on my last scouting trip and stumbled across one (almost literally) in a berry patch. I had found some good bear sign though, and was still feeling good about my odds for success as I packed my bag and got everything ready to go.
I hiked in the day before bear season opened, anxious to get camp set up and start hunting the next day. This was my first time deliberately hunting bears; and I had absorbed as much information about their habits as possible from podcasts, books, and the internet; but nothing teaches you like the real thing.
The sun rose on September 2 to find me perched on some rocks glued to my binos trying to find any signs of life in the valley below.
After hours of fruitless glassing, I got restless and decided to still hunt along a ridge and work my way back towards camp. I found quite a few mule deer, but no bear sign that was fresher than a few days. Once I got back to camp, I traded my .45-70 for a slingshot and went out after grouse. It turns out that I am not a good shot with a slingshot, for 2019 I will partner with neighborhood kids to get my aim down. Abandoned the grouse plans and cooked some MH instead, then another restless night hoping for more luck the next day.
Almost straight out of camp the next morning I found myself next to a dead moose calf that was still warm; and then promptly got charged by the momma moose out of the willows. She stopped her charge at about 5 yards as I ran backwards, hoping she wouldn't follow and force my hand.
After that encounter, I started to still hunt my way back towards the truck. By 1:00 I was back at the truck and doing what I could to beat Labor Day traffic back home. I reached out to the game warden about the calf, he went in and did a necropsy and found a dislocated shoulder and confirmed that I could legally hunt over the calf for bears if I wanted to.
Thankfully it was a short week, and Friday night I was strapping on my backpack and lacing my boots; heading in from a different trailhead to the same area I had been in the weekend before. The hike in had my hopes up, I seemed to be in constant fresh bear scat and ravaged berry bushes. As I set camp up near this promising area, I was treated to a beautiful sunset down the valley.
Continued in next post...
Despite hundreds of miles covered, I didn't turn up a single bull and didn't find a bear until I was 1/2 mile from the truck on my last scouting trip and stumbled across one (almost literally) in a berry patch. I had found some good bear sign though, and was still feeling good about my odds for success as I packed my bag and got everything ready to go.
I hiked in the day before bear season opened, anxious to get camp set up and start hunting the next day. This was my first time deliberately hunting bears; and I had absorbed as much information about their habits as possible from podcasts, books, and the internet; but nothing teaches you like the real thing.
The sun rose on September 2 to find me perched on some rocks glued to my binos trying to find any signs of life in the valley below.
After hours of fruitless glassing, I got restless and decided to still hunt along a ridge and work my way back towards camp. I found quite a few mule deer, but no bear sign that was fresher than a few days. Once I got back to camp, I traded my .45-70 for a slingshot and went out after grouse. It turns out that I am not a good shot with a slingshot, for 2019 I will partner with neighborhood kids to get my aim down. Abandoned the grouse plans and cooked some MH instead, then another restless night hoping for more luck the next day.
Almost straight out of camp the next morning I found myself next to a dead moose calf that was still warm; and then promptly got charged by the momma moose out of the willows. She stopped her charge at about 5 yards as I ran backwards, hoping she wouldn't follow and force my hand.
After that encounter, I started to still hunt my way back towards the truck. By 1:00 I was back at the truck and doing what I could to beat Labor Day traffic back home. I reached out to the game warden about the calf, he went in and did a necropsy and found a dislocated shoulder and confirmed that I could legally hunt over the calf for bears if I wanted to.
Thankfully it was a short week, and Friday night I was strapping on my backpack and lacing my boots; heading in from a different trailhead to the same area I had been in the weekend before. The hike in had my hopes up, I seemed to be in constant fresh bear scat and ravaged berry bushes. As I set camp up near this promising area, I was treated to a beautiful sunset down the valley.
Continued in next post...
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