Since I started hunting brown bears in 1998, I think I have become a fairly good judge of them. It’s very difficult to judge animals without horns or antlers. There are a lot of things to consider. To some people, all bears look big at a distance. I’ve seen experienced bear guides mistake a big sow for a boar or an 8.5’ boar for a 9.5’ boar. When judging brown bears, some of the most important characteristics to evaluate for big boars are a long thick neck, the angle of the forehead brow, a stovepipe nose that does not taper, a flat nose that doesn’t appear pointed, ears that appear small and more on the side of the head, front legs that do not taper, shoulders being wider and massive, and sometimes, color. Other behavioral clues are slow lethargic movement and locomotion, head hanging low, and not afraid of most anything. Younger boars and sows are more on alert and move quicker. Sows can be 8’ on Kodiak and the AK Peninsula so that can make things difficult but they have heads that appear to sit on their shoulders without much neck. Their rears appear larger than shoulders. Sows are usually lighter colored but this is not 100%. This is a very difficult business.
Using these characteristics and looking at pictures, it is hard to beat Kodiak and the AK Peninsula for the biggest overall bears. When looking at the Kamchatka bears, I do not see the average size that I have personally experienced on the Peninsula. I see a lot of exaggeration claims of size. I see 8’ bears called 9’ and 9’ bears called 10’ most of the time. In real life, a 10’ bear is twice the size of an 8’ bear. This is due to being longer and thicker, both. In the best areas on the Peninsula, you can see a dozen or more bears a day.
As for management, I would put Alaska’s management of brown bears on some parts of western Kodiak and on the Peninsula as the best in the world. Russians use snow machines and allow some hunters to kill two bears. Bears reproduce slowly with Cubs staying with sows for up to three years. It’s no secret that parts of Kamchatka are over hunted. Buyer
I don’t believe Mr. Smith is a brown bear expert and I don’t believe he has hunted all the areas on the Peninsula. The two bears my hunters killed in 2018 were the 19th and 15th bears seen on those days. Densities on the Pacific side of the peninsula are very high in the spring.