Thank you appreciate the advise!If you have never been there before. Keep an eye on weather and focus in on areas with snow. Cut a track and your in the game. There’s really no e-scouting, Rocky outcrops, laurel thickets, clear cuts are traditional areas that hold bears. You can always do small pushes to one another as well. Best wishes
I disagreeFind the bear hunters, hunt where they aren't.
Hounds mess up the hunting when you aren't hunting with them.
I disagree
Use the hound hunters to your advantage, they get game up and moving, they may be running another bear where the track originated a mile away and bump up other bears laying around bedded that otherwise will lay there all day in a laurel thicket.
Only other advise I can give would be to find the acorns, where I live they are spotty this year. If you find what they are feeding on they will be around. If there are no acorns to be found, I have seen them eat hickory nuts as well.
well in a way that's kinda what I was saying, they hold up and move when they have to when dogs run by them etc. lol and they spook them out.Not my experience, hounds tend to make stuff hold up until they hafta move.
And when they run stuff, they tend to run it clear out of the area.
There's always a chance of something getting spooked to you, by hounds, other hunters, etc, but usually that's a random chance. Put yourself in a spot where it's more than random that puts your quarry in front of you.
If it's an area that hasn't had dogs in it, yeah, they probably jump a bunch of stuff up. If it's an area that frequently gets run, should be self explanatory.
what part of WV are you attempting this?Thank you for your responses, I hope others insert there experiences and knowledge as well!