Travis2282
AH enthusiast
Mostly hunting whitetail near meth hoods! Haha
@BJH65, I can relate! Dang bears are hard if not impossible to predict. I had posted this in another thread but kind of fits here also. I spent a couple of days this past weekend with a cousin who has a place and property on the Kenai. He related a story about a rogue bear on the river a few years ago at the same time I had foolishly stayed fishing too late down at the confluence of the Russian and Kenai. Nobody there past about 3 pm should have been a clue, but hey, the fishing was exceptional. At dark, I started up the trail and suddenly realized how stupid!! There had been recent bear problems on the river in a couple of places around Cooper Landing including at the Russian River confluence and I knew it. All the way out to the parking lot I was thinking how dumb, dumb, dumb ... no gun, no bear spray, armed only with a fly rod, at night, with problem bears around. This past weekend at a family gathering, my cousin retold that story about a particular, locally known brown bear he had snooping around his place on the Kenai that had grabbed and badly mauled a tourist. All at the same time I was whistling through the graveyard walking back to my vehicle in the dark! Sometimes, luck favors the foolish I guess.
Nice bear. I would use a piss bottle or urinal at night from now on!Back in 2004 we hunted grizzly in Alaska with old time guide George Faerber, who had guided Ted Nugent back in the 70’s. We were hunting grizzly near the Chulitna River, adjacent to Denali National Park near Cantwell Alaska. B&C considers them brown bear and SCI grizzly bear due to their demarcation line.
According to George, a large boar in this region can top out at 9 ft and 1000 lbs, so larger than true interior grizzlies due to a combination of salmon and berries in their diet, but not as large as the Kodiak and Alaskan Peninsula brown bears. I recall walking along a narrow trail, almost like a tunnel through the willows to 4th of July Creek, and noting tufts of rubbed off grizzly hair on each side of the narrow trail. George casually mentioned a fisherman was horribly mauled by a grizzly the year before on this same trail. I asked if I should chamber a round in my 300 Win Mag? George said “no, it’s rare to surprise one along the trail.” I was thinking to myself, what about the fisherman?
We had a tent camp set up out in the bush. Proper camp etiquette is to use a designated latrine hole and mine was about 100 yards from camp. I had a routine, and sometimes if I had to pee in the middle of the night, I would grab a flashlight and my handgun, and dutifully walk the 100 yards to my latrine hole I had dug.
One morning we got up to discover huge grizzly tracks all over the camp including just outside our tent flap! All food was in bear proof containers and nothing was disturbed or out of place. George said he was a “well mannered bear.” Anyhow, I stopped walking out 100 yards at night to pee and if I had to pee it was just outside our tent!
A few days later George had an encounter at night with a grizzly when he was out using his latrine hole, except this bear wasn’t polite and followed him back to camp, huffing and chomping its teeth while it circled the camp, too dark to really identify whether a sow with cubs or a single grizzly. My brother initially had his 44 magnum M29 but wisely transitioned to his 375 H&H.
George didn’t want to shine a light and be accused of spotlighting and the grizzly continued to circle the camp, clicking its teeth and woofing. The grizzly did this for a good 5 minutes which seemed like an eternity to them. The assistant guide and I returned to camp from a days hunt and the bear departed. My brother and George told us what happened. Too many people must have driven the grizzly away.
I ended up getting a nice 8ft Grizzly on the 6th day.
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i dont leave the tent at night. piss bottle always alwaysNice bear. I would use a piss bottle or urinal at night from now on!
Should have got a tree lounge. Next to impossible to fall out of.Last day of an Ohio bow hunt several years back. Drove from camp to the spot where we were parking, about 5 miles. We got out and started to get our climbers out as well as our bows. I then realized that I had neglected to put my Hunter‘s Safety system vest back in my bow case. Crap. No biggy, I can do without it for one hunt. Got about 50 yards into the woods, then told my partner
to go ahead, I’m going back to camp for my harness. Wasted about 30 minutes. Long story short, we had agreed to get down when the church bells in the valley next to us tolled noon, as we had to get on the road back to Texas. I used the lightest, easiest carrying stand on the market at that time. Coming down at 11, the upper snapped in half at 20 plus feet. I plunged headfirst toward the ground, my right foot stuck in the lower section. The straps grabbed me between the shoulders. Thank God for that moment of clear headedness earlier.
Was able to pull myself up to the platform by sheer adrenaline only, as I was doing a full split down the tree, with right foot still hung in the climber over my head. Ordered the beefiest stand on the market as we drove home. Summit Goliath , at the time. Still use it.
Hah! Had a tree lounge! Great for rifle I suppose, but scariest stand ever for bow. Easy to fall out.Should have got a tree lounge. Next to impossible to fall out of.