You guys seem to not know the difference between a true bear hunter, and somebody that just stumbles onto a bear while hunting. Most true bear hunters, hunt with dogs, and shoot the bear at close range while treed. At least that’s the way it was done back In the day. They also sometimes went into their dens after them before they became active in the spring. Both of these situations involved a well placed head shot, if everything went as planned.
Hungry Horse
Never met a true bear hunter I guess. I've shot a few - ribs and head shots. Both worked a treat. Stopped hunting them when I stopped eating them.
I have no intention to hunt or shoot a grizzly. I have eaten grizzly though - just as good, maybe better than the black bears we ate. Might have been the cloves
but that roast was good. It was a Spatsizi Park, B.C. bear - big one 9 1/2' square.
It is illegal to use dogs for bear here in BC, too, Dave - as well as shooting them over bait - or even a gut pile can be considered baiting them.
Grizzlies don't normally climb trees, can though - the odd one that is shaped properly.
Only a fool would go into a grizzly's den. Some stay active all winter, or exit the den now and then throughout the winter season
so do not go into a deep sleep like black bears.
The G-bears are not true hibernators, but do, apparently enjoy a late fall or winter meal of a denned, black bear.
This discussion reminded me of Julus Baishev, a young native lad from Yakutsk, Siberia. He was an exchange student here at UNBC while my daughters were a the University.
We took him out hunting for a day, a drive about and grouse hunt,actually and he saw more game, moose and deer than he'd ever seen in a month at home. We had a grouse supper
which was wonderful, of course. Julus (pronounced dooloose) told us of bear hunting 'at home'. Their bears are actually in-land grizzlies, very similar in most ways to ours. They are hunted
in the winter by finding a den, then the youngest/newest member of the hunters has to crawl into the den, wake the bear, then he gets pulled out by a rope around his feet before the bear can grab
him. When the bear emerges, they other 'hunters' all shoot it with their 12 bores loaded with slugs.
Julus said he was lucky, only had to do that once. The 'bait' is rarely grabbed by the bear, he said, but if he is, it's usually bad as the head is usually grabbed.