Im just looking for a barrel design or a way to make it a lot harder for the small ones to access the bait, ive tried using smaller foods like popcorn and peanuts so they cant walk away with the bait but the smaller bears sit there and clean me out lol.
Last year i was using a steel barrel, cut a 4"-6" diameter hole in the front and jammed logs in the hole.
You don't need to cut holes in the barrel. Fill 3/4 full with oats through the large bung hole, pour in a 5 gallon bucket of used fryer grease, seal the large hole, take out the small bung. Punch a hole through the top lip and attach a chain to the drum and a nearby tree, about 8 ft in length. If you can, attach a heavy duty swivel, otherwise they'll have the chain wrapped up from rolling the barrel around. Dump some extra fryer grease on the ground around the bait and on top of the barrel.
With this setup, they have to work to get the bait, you'll know when it's hit as the drum will be knocked over and they don't waste much. With large side holes, most of the bait will get spilled and trampled. If you don't have a farmer nearby who has oats, you can buy rolled oats or corn in 50 lb bags at Co-op feed stores etc. If you're in a more urban area, talk to people with horses, they'll know where to find oats or may have some.
The small bears tend to spend more time at a bait. There's no way to limit that, but at least this way they have to work for the meal.
You don't need to cut holes in the barrel. Fill 3/4 full with oats through the large bung hole, pour in a 5 gallon bucket of used fryer grease, seal the large hole, take out the small bung. Punch a hole through the top lip and attach a chain to the drum and a nearby tree, about 8 ft in length. If you can, attach a heavy duty swivel, otherwise they'll have the chain wrapped up from rolling the barrel around. Dump some extra fryer grease on the ground around the bait and on top of the barrel.
With this setup, they have to work to get the bait, you'll know when it's hit as the drum will be knocked over and they don't waste much. With large side holes, most of the bait will get spilled and trampled. If you don't have a farmer nearby who has oats, you can buy rolled oats or corn in 50 lb bags at Co-op feed stores etc. If you're in a more urban area, talk to people with horses, they'll know where to find oats or may have some.
The small bears tend to spend more time at a bait. There's no way to limit that, but at least this way they have to work for the meal.
Do you put the heavy duty swivel at the barrel or at the tree? I imagine the chain would get wrapped around the tree thats why i ask.
I've done the bear suckers and mentioned it here. I find they will last a long time which is good. They do not help to cause a sense of urgency or competition at the bait though, which isn't great if you are trophy hunting. IE if you have limited bait, biggest bear will claim bait and come in before the bait is gone. I'm not a pro bear hunter btw.
My set up, learned from a guide outfitter acquaintance. If it ain't worth their while, they won't come back. Hard to see, but there is a cover on that barrel and a 5" hole near the bottom. Not a lazy man's game, in spite of what some think.
You bait hard at the beginning to get as many bears coming as possible. Once you have big bear sign you taper off the bait to get the big fellas to come during hunting light.




























