Are you an alaskan resident? Have you hunted coastal bears?Alaska, alpine bears in the fall after they've been in the berries. All of the units I hunt your allowed three to five bears a year with no closed season. I'm not interested in the hide, have no place to put it.
Were the Maine trips baited? I live in pa we have a good amount of bears but we can't bait for them or use hounds which I think is a good thing for pa.I've hunted black bear both spring and fall in Maine, and did have 2 trips to Wyoming in the fall and a Spring bear hunt in Idaho. I do prefer spring time over fall, less bugs and cooler temps. Also 2 completely different styles of hunting, definitely prefer going out west over east.
Both baited and hounds in Maine, I hunt in eastern PA, get a bear tag every year, fortunately for the bears I’ve seen, they were all pretty young, so I haven’t filled a tag yet there.Were the Maine trips baited? I live in pa we have a good amount of bears but we can't bait for them or use hounds which I think is a good thing for pa.
Yes I'm a resident, been living here since I was a teenager. I have a jet boat but don't use it in salt water.Are you an alaskan resident? Have you hunted coastal bears?
I've gotten a bear tag the past few years but I've never seen one in season to have an opportunity yet. Maine is on my mind but so has new brunswick. And I think I'd like to go west a little more.Both baited and hounds in Maine, I hunt in eastern PA, get a bear tag every year, fortunately for the bears I’ve seen, they were all pretty young, so I haven’t filled a tag yet there.
That is something I didn't know. I figured it would be like ID, MT or WY.No spring bear anymore in WA (don't get me started on that one), but WA has more bears than any other state than Alaska. OTC, 2 tags.
Nobody ever really talks about WA for bear hunting so that's good to know I'll be looking into it more for sure.No spring bear anymore in WA (don't get me started on that one), but WA has more bears than any other state than Alaska. OTC, 2 tags.
Maine is closer. If you west, even if you don't fill a tag, it'll be worth the trip.I've gotten a bear tag the past few years but I've never seen one in season to have an opportunity yet. Maine is on my mind but so has new brunswick. And I think I'd like to go west a little more.
I've been out west on vacation twice and I'm going in September for elk in montana so I definitely agree there. Might be more fun than a baited hunt.Maine is closer. If you west, even if you don't fill a tag, it'll be worth the trip.
No spring bear anymore in WA (don't get me started on that one), but WA has more bears than any other state than Alaska. OTC, 2 tags.
That is something I didn't know. I figured it would be like ID, MT or WY.
Nobody ever really talks about WA for bear hunting so that's good to know I'll be looking into it more for sure.
Makes sense. CA population in 80s was 10,000. Mid 2010s around 35,000. DFW came out a couple months ago and said it may be as high as 80,000 now! At this rate CA will have more bears than Alaska soon lolMy info was from 25+ years ago.
Holy Moly! Does anybody hunt them? This might be the only reason to go to CA.Makes sense. CA population in 80s was 10,000. Mid 2010s around 35,000. DFW came out a couple months ago and said it may be as high as 80,000 now! At this rate CA will have more bears than Alaska soon lol
I said CA has second most bears and that it does… never compared one to the other by any other metric. However, majority of the state isn’t open to bear hunting. The area that is, is a similar size as Washington and the VAST majority is accessible public lands. Further, majority of the bears are in a much smaller subset of that. CA has around 3x the bears of either state. Bear density in CA does more than “might compete” in those areas. Divide the bear count in Alaska by the area, you going to tell me Alaska isn’t good for hunting black bear? lol and yes, if you’re trying to sit over bait, or use dogs then CA isn’t the place, but neither is washington. But to me (and likely OP who is asking), no bait or dogs is actually a pro for CA as you don’t have to compete with bait or hound hunters. You also have very few people in Ca actually hunting for bears. Most are just taken by deer hunters that stumble across a bear. This results in very little competition in the state for dedicated bear hunters. I also think fall bear often tastes better and can have even better hides in rifle season. All of these states are very good for a competent hunter and imo trying to say one of better vs the other is a fools errand. I think it makes more sense to decide what kind of hunt you want to do, what time of year you are available, and what logistics make more sense in your situation.CA only has a fall season, one bear max per person, no bait, no dogs. Also it's a big state. What most hunters probably should care about is bear density on accessible public land. I would guess Washington and northern Idaho have more bears per square mile on public land than CA does, although the best areas of CA might compete.
Good points, you thought it through a lot more than I did. Biggest negative of CA in my view is the one tag and no spring season. In Idaho (and I think also Washington?) you can get two tags. I also believe WA rifle bear season opens in August, which seems a huge advantage, and just blows my mind.I said CA has second most bears and that it does… never compared one to the other by any other metric. However, majority of the state isn’t open to bear hunting. The area that is, is a similar size as Washington and the VAST majority is accessible public lands. Further, majority of the bears are in a much smaller subset of that. CA has around 3x the bears of either state. Bear density in CA does more than “might compete” in those areas. Divide the bear count in Alaska by the area, you going to tell me Alaska isn’t good for hunting black bear? lol and yes, if you’re trying to sit over bait, or use dogs then CA isn’t the place, but neither is washington. But to me (and likely OP who is asking), no bait or dogs is actually a pro for CA as you don’t have to compete with bait or hound hunters. You also have very few people in Ca actually hunting for bears. Most are just taken by deer hunters that stumble across a bear. This results in very little competition in the state for dedicated bear hunters. I also think fall bear often tastes better and can have even better hides in rifle season. All of these states are very good for a competent hunter and imo trying to say one of better vs the other is a fools errand. I think it makes more sense to decide what kind of hunt you want to do, what time of year you are available, and what logistics make more sense in your situation.