inquisitiveram
FNG
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2021
- Messages
- 40
I shot this bear at 375 yards with a 7mm Rem Mag 150 grain tipped bullet. He dropped like a sack of potatoes and rolled 100 yards down a draw. From my vantage he rolled behind 2 big pines and I could not see him. My hunting partner yells that he’s up and running, and I spotted him running right, up the wall of the draw, then straight uphill, where we lost him in trees and dense brush.
My partner said he went into a thicket and didn’t come out. Based on the shot and his reaction, it didn’t seem like a heart/lung shot, so we decided to leave him overnight and return the following morning. Unfortunately it rained overnight and continued steadily for several hours in the morning during the search, obliterating any blood trail. Also, the “thicket” from across the canyon actually turned out to be a densely covered ridge with escape routes leading uphill that we could not see from our shooting vantage.
We searched for hours on 2 different occasions and put in several miles gridding but never found the bear. Based on how the bear reacted after the shot and his path, I believe the bear was shot in the withers, temporarily shocking the nervous system but allowing him to eventually recover and run. My guess is he could not have been hit in the heart/lungs and run that far up a steep incline, but I’ve heard of elk running uphill before. But straight up a mountainside for 300-500 yards, or more? We never found him along the escape route up the ridge or in any of the brush along it. And we scoured the “thicket” twice. I looked in every hollow log, brush pile, snarl—I even looked up in the trees in case he climbed one, died, and got hung up in the branches.
We think the bear probably was not fatally hit, but I hate not knowing. Any thoughts on what happened? What would cause the bear to drop and roll for 100 yds but then get back up and run off at full speed without a limp, stumble, or any sign or being injured?
My partner said he went into a thicket and didn’t come out. Based on the shot and his reaction, it didn’t seem like a heart/lung shot, so we decided to leave him overnight and return the following morning. Unfortunately it rained overnight and continued steadily for several hours in the morning during the search, obliterating any blood trail. Also, the “thicket” from across the canyon actually turned out to be a densely covered ridge with escape routes leading uphill that we could not see from our shooting vantage.
We searched for hours on 2 different occasions and put in several miles gridding but never found the bear. Based on how the bear reacted after the shot and his path, I believe the bear was shot in the withers, temporarily shocking the nervous system but allowing him to eventually recover and run. My guess is he could not have been hit in the heart/lungs and run that far up a steep incline, but I’ve heard of elk running uphill before. But straight up a mountainside for 300-500 yards, or more? We never found him along the escape route up the ridge or in any of the brush along it. And we scoured the “thicket” twice. I looked in every hollow log, brush pile, snarl—I even looked up in the trees in case he climbed one, died, and got hung up in the branches.
We think the bear probably was not fatally hit, but I hate not knowing. Any thoughts on what happened? What would cause the bear to drop and roll for 100 yds but then get back up and run off at full speed without a limp, stumble, or any sign or being injured?