Free: Contests & Raffles.
The key to this verdict as stated in the article is the bear was "40 yards away when it was shot and had not charged." That is a great plenty of distance for a bear to be away from you and remain quite handily out of harms way. I grew up on the western border of Glacier park. My parents still live there surrounded by national forests. In the last week my father has been within 40 yards of non charging grizzly bears 3 times. Hell, he could have re-carpeted his entire house with Grizzly hide twice and added in the 36x48 shop once with the non charging grizzlies he's had within 40 yards in the last 5 years. Hell, I was 15 yards from a Grizzly just last summer here in Washington. The point is, if you hunt in Grizzly country you can't be scared of them, period. Aware and respectful, yes, very much so. But this was a fair verdict, and to be honest, I am rather surprised they didn't nail him further if there was no evidence of a charge.
It does sound like fear versus self defense.
A friend of mine was deer hunting near Seeley Lake, MT, and was being stalked by a huge cougar. He tried yelling, waving his arms and slowing backing away; to which the cougar only closed the gap with a "cat-like" crawl. When it got to within 20 yards (about 2 leaps) he shot and killed the cat. He was alone and no one else in the area to witness this. Even though there had been a huge winter kill of deer the previous year, and the local game warden noted previous aggressive encounters with cougars due to a food shortage; my friend ended up with a $500 fine and loss of his MT hunting license for the rest of the year. So much for honesty. SSS seems to apply in these situations too.
Quote from: GoldTip on May 28, 2010, 09:38:25 AMThe key to this verdict as stated in the article is the bear was "40 yards away when it was shot and had not charged." That is a great plenty of distance for a bear to be away from you and remain quite handily out of harms way. I grew up on the western border of Glacier park. My parents still live there surrounded by national forests. In the last week my father has been within 40 yards of non charging grizzly bears 3 times. Hell, he could have re-carpeted his entire house with Grizzly hide twice and added in the 36x48 shop once with the non charging grizzlies he's had within 40 yards in the last 5 years. Hell, I was 15 yards from a Grizzly just last summer here in Washington. The point is, if you hunt in Grizzly country you can't be scared of them, period. Aware and respectful, yes, very much so. But this was a fair verdict, and to be honest, I am rather surprised they didn't nail him further if there was no evidence of a charge. So by that logic if a bad guy with a knife is closing slowly from 21 feet you shouldn't shoot because he's not charging? I haven't done the math but I pretty sure that at 40 yards if the bear had charged it could have closed the distance pretty fast at over 30Mph, possibly fast enough to seriously injure or kill the guy before he could kill it. IMO any large predator that shows no fear of humans should be put down immediately before they make a snack out of one of us. We weren't there so the only one that really knows for sure how things went down is the guy that shot the bear. Who are we to say his life wasn't in danger. Obviously he *believed* it was, and reacted accordingly. Penalizing someone for acting in self defense even if that penalty is "only a misdemeanor" seems ludicrous to me.
How far is 40yds at 35mph?
Grizzly bears are a different animal all together. I've been fortunate enough to not have been bothered by aggressive ones only curious ones that left once they decided I was a crazy Finn. What I have been told by some very respected guides is this: a griz will leave you alone most of the time, but IF that bear that sights you is on higher ground that you and it decides to charge. It will not be a false charge. I got this little tidbit from two guides out around Chickaloon and Glacier, Alaska. Both are very experienced and woods savvy.