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Author Topic: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear  (Read 4750 times)

Offline knob221

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How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« on: April 28, 2024, 06:24:10 PM »
I'm looking for advice on what to do during summer to scout for fall black bear in the cascades. I'm trying to find areas that I can glass a lot of ripe huckleberries. What should I do to find these kinds of areas? It seems really straightforward, but after two years of bear hunting I still don't feel like I have great spots. I have shot two bears, but both were about 10 miles hike in, and neither were great for glassing.

I was thinking I e-scout to identify potential areas, then go hike into the areas I would be glassing and see if there are a lot of huckleberries (the plants, not the berries yet of course). Obviously I will tick the boxes of figuring out access, glassing spots, camp spots, water, etc. as well.

Anything else I should be thinking about?

Offline Boss .300 winmag

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #1 on: April 28, 2024, 06:38:19 PM »
Unfortunately unless we get lots of rain in the mountains this summer we’ll have another failed berry crop making your quest much harder due to lack of snow pack.

I’d be looking for north slope snow fields that could possibly hold long enough to supply a good water source to berry patches.

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Offline ganghis

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #2 on: April 28, 2024, 06:41:45 PM »
In my experience, hucks tend to be in a bit more shaded spots that make them difficult to glass.  I'd focus in on areas that have blueberries, sometimes mixed with mountain ash.  There are a lot of places that have those two things, and not all of them have bears... so scouting (and hunting) in August should serve you well. Hopefully the crop this year is better than last - seemed like it was a total failure in the Cascades in places I was hunting.  Never seen it that bad.  Bears were still cruising around but I think they disappeared from high alpine meadow areas earlier too.  Your plan of e-scouting and checking them out in person sounds good.  If you're just interested in the meat, you can get away with a decently long pack out early season.  Meat + hide = closer.

Offline huntnnw

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #3 on: April 28, 2024, 08:27:00 PM »
There is 0 reason to hunt bears 10 miles in unless that’s the experience you are striving for.

Offline knob221

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #4 on: April 28, 2024, 10:13:56 PM »
There is 0 reason to hunt bears 10 miles in unless that’s the experience you are striving for.

Mind giving me some of your bear spots, then?  ;)

Offline knob221

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #5 on: April 28, 2024, 10:25:00 PM »
In my experience, hucks tend to be in a bit more shaded spots that make them difficult to glass.  I'd focus in on areas that have blueberries, sometimes mixed with mountain ash.  There are a lot of places that have those two things, and not all of them have bears... so scouting (and hunting) in August should serve you well. Hopefully the crop this year is better than last - seemed like it was a total failure in the Cascades in places I was hunting.  Never seen it that bad.  Bears were still cruising around but I think they disappeared from high alpine meadow areas earlier too.  Your plan of e-scouting and checking them out in person sounds good.  If you're just interested in the meat, you can get away with a decently long pack out early season.  Meat + hide = closer.

Could you please differentiate for me what you consider to be a blueberry vs a huckleberry? Common names are confounding. I call all wild blueberries huckleberries. They are all under the genus Vaccinium. I'm assuming you're referring to Vaccinium deliciosum, which grows at our higher elevations. only grows to be a few feet tall, and is my favorite of the huckleberries to eat.

Offline knob221

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #6 on: April 28, 2024, 10:45:03 PM »
Unfortunately unless we get lots of rain in the mountains this summer we’ll have another failed berry crop making your quest much harder due to lack of snow pack.

I’d be looking for north slope snow fields that could possibly hold long enough to supply a good water source to berry patches.

Could you explain your reasoning here about the low snow pack leading to bad huckleberries? I don't quite follow. I do know that huckleberries get a lot of water from snow melt, but I also know that they don't really uptake water without leaves. So the way I see it, they're only actually uptaking snow melt during that short period of time between leaf out and the soil going dry from the snow melt. That snow melt hydrated soil period while huckleberry leaves are present should still happen the same regardless of whether the snow was 8 feet deep vs 20. So please explain to me if I'm missing something here. Last year we had a deep snow pack, and a very wet spring/early summer, yet a terrible berry crop. I don't quite have my finger on the pulse of what causes good huckleberry crops.

Regardless of the quality of this years crop, I am fairly certain that this year will be an early crop due to the early melt out caused by light snow pack.

Offline Skyvalhunter

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #7 on: April 29, 2024, 05:26:29 AM »
The berries need moisture to grow or get large as water is their main component. If there is little to no moisture existing then the plants in order to survive sacrifice the berry and it either dries up or isn't produced. Sure there are some areas that will have berries but if is a warm dry summer then most wont. If its that warm the bears will be down in the creek drainages trying to stay cool. So pray for some moisture
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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #8 on: April 29, 2024, 07:15:43 AM »
Unfortunately unless we get lots of rain in the mountains this summer we’ll have another failed berry crop making your quest much harder due to lack of snow pack.

I’d be looking for north slope snow fields that could possibly hold long enough to supply a good water source to berry patches.

Could you explain your reasoning here about the low snow pack leading to bad huckleberries? I don't quite follow. I do know that huckleberries get a lot of water from snow melt, but I also know that they don't really uptake water without leaves. So the way I see it, they're only actually uptaking snow melt during that short period of time between leaf out and the soil going dry from the snow melt. That snow melt hydrated soil period while huckleberry leaves are present should still happen the same regardless of whether the snow was 8 feet deep vs 20. So please explain to me if I'm missing something here. Last year we had a deep snow pack, and a very wet spring/early summer, yet a terrible berry crop. I don't quite have my finger on the pulse of what causes good huckleberry crops.

Regardless of the quality of this years crop, I am fairly certain that this year will be an early crop due to the early melt out caused by light snow pack.


Last year the snow pack melted off rapidly due to way higher temperatures in early spring leaving little to no snow pack for the berries to have water. Plus the nights got really cold. Our area of the valley lost 30% or more of its hay production due to the weather drying out the fields then cold temps at night.

That’s why having a steady rain fall this year in the summer might help out the berries, I really don’t think the snow pack is gonna be around long enough to give us a good berry crop.
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Hi I'm 8156, our leader is Bearpaw.
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Offline hunter399

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #9 on: April 29, 2024, 07:28:29 AM »
Last year we picked huckleberry around July 1.
They popped about a month early, normally around august 1.


Offline ganghis

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #10 on: April 29, 2024, 08:14:24 AM »

[/quote]
Could you please differentiate for me what you consider to be a blueberry vs a huckleberry? Common names are confounding. I call all wild blueberries huckleberries. They are all under the genus Vaccinium. I'm assuming you're referring to Vaccinium deliciosum, which grows at our higher elevations. only grows to be a few feet tall, and is my favorite of the huckleberries to eat.
[/quote]

Yeah common names often lead to confusion, ha ha.  I think of huckleberries as the ones that grow on larger bushes (typically 3-6 feet) with berries that are sparsely distributed so take more work to pick than the powdery blue "blueberries" that are lower to the ground and more common out in open meadows. 

https://mountainflamingo.com/your-primer-on-berry-picking-in-washington-state/#:~:text=Cascade%20blueberries%20are%20closely%20related,are%20a%20powdery%20bright%20blue.

Offline huntnnw

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #11 on: April 29, 2024, 01:36:15 PM »
There is 0 reason to hunt bears 10 miles in unless that’s the experience you are striving for.

Mind giving me some of your bear spots, then?  ;)

Bears are going to be where the food source is for that time of year. It’s knowing what bears are targeting at the time when you are hunting a given area. There is so many bears in WA and so little pressure that there is 0 reason to have to pack in to hunt them. I’ve shot or helped wife and friends kill around 30-40 bears and none have been over a mile from truck. Most under 1/2 mi from rig. Lotta bears are spotted glassing from truck and then making a plan to get into range.

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #12 on: April 29, 2024, 01:54:56 PM »
We hang trail cameras in areas where there is bear sign.  If you get a bear showing up fairly consistently on a trail, set up to watch that area from a distance with a decent prevailing wind.  You may have to sit for several days before seeing him, but eventually, he'll probably show up.  A predator call helps raise your odds as well. Good luck. :tup:
Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes.  That way, when you criticize them, you're a mile away and you have their shoes.

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #13 on: April 29, 2024, 02:05:50 PM »
There is 0 reason to hunt bears 10 miles in unless that’s the experience you are striving for.

Mind giving me some of your bear spots, then?  ;)

Bears are going to be where the food source is for that time of year. It’s knowing what bears are targeting at the time when you are hunting a given area. There is so many bears in WA and so little pressure that there is 0 reason to have to pack in to hunt them. I’ve shot or helped wife and friends kill around 30-40 bears and none have been over a mile from truck. Most under 1/2 mi from rig. Lotta bears are spotted glassing from truck and then making a plan to get into range.

In the Cascades or Eastern WA?

OP is talking about the Cascades which can be very different, especially the west slope.

Offline knob221

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Re: How to Summer Scout for Fall Bear
« Reply #14 on: April 29, 2024, 04:51:05 PM »
There is 0 reason to hunt bears 10 miles in unless that’s the experience you are striving for.

Mind giving me some of your bear spots, then?  ;)

Bears are going to be where the food source is for that time of year. It’s knowing what bears are targeting at the time when you are hunting a given area. There is so many bears in WA and so little pressure that there is 0 reason to have to pack in to hunt them. I’ve shot or helped wife and friends kill around 30-40 bears and none have been over a mile from truck. Most under 1/2 mi from rig. Lotta bears are spotted glassing from truck and then making a plan to get into range.

In the Cascades or Eastern WA?

OP is talking about the Cascades which can be very different, especially the west slope.

To clarify further, I'm talking about cascades near or east of the crest. I don't like hunting the west side much.

 


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