My dad hunted in the early 70's when I was really young. I don't think he went very many times but on one occasion him and his partner harvested a big black bear and I remember the picture of it completely skinned with the paws removed laying on a flat deck trailer. To me at that age it looked like an alien LOL I can still picture it in my mind all these years later. My dad never hunted again but at least he kept his rifles to hand down to me and my younger brother (303 and 22). He said the skinned bear reminded him to much of a human when it was hanging after processing. I got into hunting in my late 20's totally on my own but have only taken 2 bears in 25 years of hunting , both were confrontations while camping with the kids and out hunting deer. I always buy a bear tag , every season since i started hunting so if I do 'need' to shoot one at least I am legal in an open season. The first one was a Harrison lake bear that kept hanging around in a semi circular area about 100 yards out. Popping up and watching us over the young pines that afternoon and evening. I got up really early the next morning and got the fire going and heard a noise behind me and when i turned, the bear was maybe 40 feet away LOL I tossed a rock and it took off but kept hanging around out at that 100 yard mark. I took the rifle out because we did have kids and my dog with us. My decision was that if it came into that 50yard zone one more time, it was getting a 180gr .303 round from the very same rifle my dad hunted bear with in my toddler days. And so it went that way and I harvested a bear..... it wasn't very good LOL
Second bear I had to shoot was on a day out deer hunting in the mountains above pemberton bc, I came into the edge of camp, returning from my morning solo hunt on foot to come upon a big blackie that was trying to get into my K5 blazer with my dog inside. Same rifle, same bullet, same result LOL That one was really good eating.
We have bear fairly often at a friends place and it's usually Tacos. My wife wants me to get a bear so I have been kinda trying the last 2 seasons but never seem to connect with a bear that I want to shoot. There are still a couple weeks left in our season and the wife wants to go to the burns this weekend and pick morels so I'll be going with rifle and tag in hand so ya never know.
Bear fat for cooking.... this fat is prized for baking pastry, especially if their diet contains high amounts of berries and things. Coastal bears with fish diets are to be avoided.
You have to render the fat to a liquid, strain very well and refrigerate until it hardens into a solid. I have a bakery background and have rendered bear fat from fall bear and used it for pastry...... you gotta try it.