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Bear Hunting Ideas
Bear Hunting Ideas
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Joined: 2022-09-24
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Bear hunting is a physically demanding activity, particularly removing a harvested bear from the woods. Pre-hunt planning is very important to a profitable and rewarding bear hunting experience.

 

 

 

 

Prehunt Planning

 

 

Long earlier than harvesting a bear, the hunter should determine how the meat will be processed and how the hide will be used. Hunters ought to arrange to have help available for all points of dealing with a harvested bear and have plans made ahead of time to ensure that the meat and hide are properly processed.

 

 

 

 

Bears have an amazing amount of fats and a thick hide that provide nice insulation. Each the meat and the hide can spoil quickly particularly at temperatures above freezing. A dead bear could be massive and cumbersome. Skinning, processing and transporting a bear are difficult tasks and could also be impossible without assistance.

 

 

 

 

As a result, it is crucial that the hide be removed as quickly as possible to stop meat spoilage. In temperatures above freezing, if there's going to be a delay in getting your harvested bear to a cooler, you must consider quartering it to permit the heavier portions to chill more quickly. Before taking your bear out from the place it is killed, pack bags of ice in the body cavity or across the quarters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Know Your Capabilities

 

 

To help ensure the future of bear hunting, and all hunting, it is incredibly essential to instill respect for the outdoors and acceptable hunting ethics for all hunters. Making a clean kill as humanely as possible is a fundamental element of ethical hunting. Incorrect shot placement on a black bear can lead to pointless struggling, wounding, and failure to retrieve the animal.

 

 

 

 

Making a clean kill ought to be the top priority for hunters who determine to shoot a bear. An animal that is harvested humanely shows more character in a hunter than just a lucky shot. Especially if you are taking a youth or apprentice hunter bear hunting, help it be a positive experience by emphasizing ethics and making a clean kill.

 

 

 

 

To be ethical, all hunters need to be proficient with their firearm or bow, understand their personal effective range, and have an understanding of primary bear anatomy for shot placement. This will help lead to a quick and effective kill and decrease the prospect for wounding the bear.

 

 

 

 

Planning Your Shot

 

 

The following are some basic ideas to help ensure correct shot placement:

 

 

 

 

Hunters must understand that bears are built in another way than deer and other big game animals. The chest of a bear is compressed compared to that of a deer when looking at it from the side.

 

 

In the event you make a poor shot, a wounded bear can run for considerable distances before dying. Heavy bones, hides, and fats layers might stop quick-clotting blood from dripping and leaving a very good trail, making an injured bear hard to track.

 

 

Know your capabilities and know your shot!

 

 

A bear's most vital space is an 8" circle behind the front shoulder.

 

 

The most effective shot opportunity is a broadside shot or "quartering away" for penetration into the vital organs.

 

 

To take your shot, wait for the bear to step forward with the close to side leg exposing the heart/lung area.

 

 

Shots directly in the shoulder bone aren't recommended. Bears have large, muscular shoulders and heavy bones. A hunter who shoots ahead of the front shoulder might miss or injure the animal.

 

 

A head shot shouldn't be really useful since a bear skull may be very dense. The blunt, rounded shape can cause bullets or arrows to look off or turn out to be lodged within the skull without penetrating.

 

 

Frontal shots or pictures from directly overhead (like may happen from a tree stand) are usually not recommended because they provide little opportunity for penetration of the vital organs (particularly with archery equipment).

 

 

NEVER take a shot you might be not sure of, at a bear that's not clearly visible, or one that's positioned in such a way that you simply can not cleanly hit the vital area.

 

 

 

 

For more information about Alaska bear hunting review the web site.

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