Free: Contests & Raffles.
some kind of a timed release feeding system and associate it with a sound. they'll learn it at night, then when you use it during the day, they'll come looking when they hear the sound.
Does where you are baiting at allow placement of a container such as a 55 gal drum? If so, containing the bait and restricting their ease of access to it, will force them to stay on site longer in order to eat. One example is a 55 gal barrel with lid, turned on its side and partially buried or otherwise secured so they can't easily roll or move it, with about a 5" x 7" hole cut in it, can do one hole or up to three. This forces the bear to reach in with its paw and scoop it out, as opposed to just laying there eating it off the ground.Dog food with feed store molasses or wet cob works great for this. Are you fairly consistent when you place the bait? When we could bait, I always arrived at my barrel inside a 2 hour window. Dumped a couple of 5 gallon buckets of fresh feed, dropped some type of treats outside the barrel...fruit, raw meat, etc., or smeared peanut butter, honey, jelly, BBQ sauce etc. on the outside or trees & stumps close by. Just to give them something different.Then, as I left the site, I would take one of the buckets and pound it against the barrel, LOUD. Kinda like ringing the dinner bell!Then when I came back to hunt, I would arrive in the same window period I had previously established, dump a fresh bucket into the barrel, ring the dinner bell, only this time I stayed and waited. Since your site is already established, probably your best option right now is to try and contain it some how to limit how quick & easy they can get at it, and make them stick around working for it.
Can you get a beaver? Make sure it's skinned and put it in a burlap bag, drag it into the stand and hang it up. Amazing how fast that draws the big boys in. Beaver for bait is legal in Idaho as long as it's is skinned.
I would keep reducing the amount of bait and feed as close to noon as possible. I would also start placing .5 to 1 pound of burger at the site (as long as it is fall). Give a week or so of them getting used to fresh burger and then start cutting back on that too. As you start cutting back on the burger start spraying the area with coyote urine. Once you start with the urine you will want to make sure you are packing a weapon when dropping off the bait. We've actually gotten run off the bait a few times while spraying the urine. Big boars know the little guys are afraid of them and follow a pecking order after a while. But coyotes stealing their food sometimes will drive them nuts and they will charge and/or come in early.Even if you run out of bait at the site these bear will continue to return until they realize their sugar daddy is no longer coming home. So as long as you keep dropping off bait early and regularly you can drastically reduce the amount of bait. And as long as you give them what they want and what they need for the time of year the big boy will try to be the more dominant and be the one coming in regularly. The other thing that helps is to have a baiting partner and a routine. In this case you bait the exact time each baiting day. You approach with a partner making all kinds of racket. Bang buckets, wear bells, sing, whatever it takes to let the bear know you are coming and when you are leaving. On the day you plan to hunt approach the site with the business as usual attitude. Only this time you get into the stand while the baiting partner continues to play the "here I am, here I go" role. If the bear have not shown after an hour spray a little coyote urine out of the tree. Don't cover the area, just a little squirt.If that doesn't work...find some dumber bear
I am hunting in Idaho.
Quote from: quacksmoker on October 10, 2013, 07:15:21 AMI am hunting in Idaho. Great opening line to this thread. I thought this one would have some potential for sure.