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I'm wondering about what time of the year is best for higher elevation bear hunting. I went up to about 3000 feet last year, backpacking, for 3 days and covered a lot of area and never saw bears. Is there a time of year that is best for higher elevations as opposed to lower? Let me know what y'all have experienced. Thanks
All depends on how good a berry year we are having. In years with a lot of berries early October seems best. Lately the berry production has been so poor it's been a struggle in October with Early September being best. So it's almost impossible to say which week or even month will be best. You just have to keep getting up there and stay on top of what's going on at elevation. Good idea to taste the berries often. If you find a lot of berries, but they are sour or bitter the bear won't be working those areas as hard. Keep moving until you find an elevation or slope with sweet berries.In poor berry years I add in a lot of calling along with glassing. If the bear are working too hard to get full on berries they will often respond very well to calling. Early September when all the leaves are still on the berry bushes calling can sometimes make the bear more visible too. They might not come in to the calls as well then, but they will stand up on their hind legs and tip you off to their presence.
We went the first week of August, due to my buddy going back to school. Those are some good tips, I'm going to go back to the same spot this year. I think a bit higher and later in the year.
One of my big goals this year is a high country bear with a bow. I know where good bears hold up, but like you said Rad, that brush is the killer.
Thanks, you guys have helped a lot. The other problem that I see is that the trail head we use to get back to camp is used quite frequently up to a certain point. My buddy and I usually hike about 3 miles past where everyone usually is. Its about a 3.5 hour hike where we hike usually 4 to 5 hours. The area we hunt is really wide open, a lot of grassy fields, hill sides, rocky areas, and flowers. I don't recall ever really seeing any berries in abundance. I know there are bears there, we have seen multiple bears on the hill sides when we go fishing. But when it comes opening day we can't seem to find any. Also, were about 4 miles from a National Park boundary, where I can glass from camp and look at bears all day long. What do you think about this? find a spot further from the park and people?
Quote from: sweetlou on February 23, 2014, 11:58:09 AMThanks, you guys have helped a lot. The other problem that I see is that the trail head we use to get back to camp is used quite frequently up to a certain point. My buddy and I usually hike about 3 miles past where everyone usually is. Its about a 3.5 hour hike where we hike usually 4 to 5 hours. The area we hunt is really wide open, a lot of grassy fields, hill sides, rocky areas, and flowers. I don't recall ever really seeing any berries in abundance. I know there are bears there, we have seen multiple bears on the hill sides when we go fishing. But when it comes opening day we can't seem to find any. Also, were about 4 miles from a National Park boundary, where I can glass from camp and look at bears all day long. What do you think about this? find a spot further from the park and people? Secret to bear hunting is "Hunt where the food is!" Actually that's usually the secret to just about all hunting. In the fall a bear needs to be adding a lot of calories each day to build up fat for the winter and months of minimal feed. If you aren't seeing bear there during the season I'd assume that means there is better feed somewhere else. Probably a concentration of berries or bugs not too far from where you are at. One of the nice things about bear scat is that it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out what's in it. If you are hunting grass and bug filled rocks and all the bear scat contains fish bones or berries you are in the wrong spot.Our best high country bear spot is filled with hikers and pot smokers. It's only about half way between the trail head and a popular hiking destination. We didn't need to hike further into the wilderness to find the bear as the feed and evidence was that the bear were there. All we did was look at aerials and figure out where the concentration of food was. My father and I even chartered a plane and scouted it by air one day - Good father and son time It ended up that we only had to get off trail by about 500-800 yards to find where they bear were. We can still hear the hikers working up the trail. We can still see the hikers as they round a bend not far away. And we can still smell the marijuana smoke from where the hikers stop on a rock below us and toke away. While we see very few bear from the actual trail getting just off of it into the bears comfort zone gets us into a lot of animals. I'd prefer to not see, hear or smell another human being while in the back country. But for us that's not where the bear are!