Had an interesting experience yesterday and have some questions about it. Saw a bear at the edge of some trees about 600 yards away. Ran up closer, laid down prone, and just started to watch. I ranged a random opening, just for reference; 375 yards. 4.75 MOA. Head back in the scope. The bear just happens to walk into that opening. I'm on it. Turns broadside. Stretches wide up the hill giving me a bigger vital area. I could have pulled the trigger 10 times, but I didn't. Something just didn't feel right.
The next 30-45 minutes I spent playing cat and mouse, trying to get another shot window, and even a better judgement on how big the bear was. By this point I'm ready to let the bear have it. Finally, I see it again in an opening. It's standing on it's hind legs and then starts climbing this tree. Two thoughts go through my head - I wonder why it's climbing a tree and I'm going to blast this bear out of the tree. My wife is sitting behind me, watching through her binos. "THERE'S BABIES!" she yells. Up at the top of the tree were two adorable cubs playing around on the tree branches like toddlers around a coffer table. One black and one brown. We watched them for another 20 or 30 minutes and then left them alone. Very happy I didn't pull the trigger on momma when I could have.
I'm relatively new to bear hunting (5th year). Brings a few questions to mind:
Thanks for the help. I don't have anybody else to teach me these things. Just figuring it out as I go.
The next 30-45 minutes I spent playing cat and mouse, trying to get another shot window, and even a better judgement on how big the bear was. By this point I'm ready to let the bear have it. Finally, I see it again in an opening. It's standing on it's hind legs and then starts climbing this tree. Two thoughts go through my head - I wonder why it's climbing a tree and I'm going to blast this bear out of the tree. My wife is sitting behind me, watching through her binos. "THERE'S BABIES!" she yells. Up at the top of the tree were two adorable cubs playing around on the tree branches like toddlers around a coffer table. One black and one brown. We watched them for another 20 or 30 minutes and then left them alone. Very happy I didn't pull the trigger on momma when I could have.
I'm relatively new to bear hunting (5th year). Brings a few questions to mind:
- How often does this happen? I would have sworn after watching that bear for 30-45 minutes there were no cubs.
- What else can you really do, besides watch them for a reasonable amount of time? The other half dozen bears I've seen have been cruising and don't give you much time to get a shot off.
- How many years do cubs stay with the mom? I believe it is two years for some reason.
- If you shot the mom of cubs that were just born that spring, would the cubs die?
- If you shot a mom of cubs that was born the previous spring, would the cubs die?
- Do other females ever accept "fostercubs"?
- It has to happen that people accidentally shoot the mom, even after watching for an extended time period. Is there anyway to tell if the female had babies from the carcass, if you don't physically see the babies?
- Is there anything you can do if you accidentally do shoot a mom?
Thanks for the help. I don't have anybody else to teach me these things. Just figuring it out as I go.