Is excessive Logging , hurting the bear pop in your area

It will be 20 years this year since we last logged our 700 acres. It was the best thing we ever did for our hunt camp. We are looking into getting it done again this winter. Better hunting and good money gets put back into the camp
 
How stupid is that ..berries grow on bushes with leaves ..good grief .. they use 1/2 liter equivalent and spray it all over the cut block . Round up is non selective ..The needles are so fine as to not absorb the chem . The broader leaves do and die ..The forest is being farmed for money . Anyone seeing more bears in these areas is good news ...

You don't even know what herbicide means and you're spouting off

Buddy you need to stop
 
Did you know that there are areas in this country where they do not spray logging blocks?

Unaware that poplar is logged for lumber and chipped for pulp. Feelings and thoughts, the way a woman argues or tries to justify herself.

Amazing what happens when you have forestry work AND you don't let people just shoot all the moose they see in clear cuts or deny road access...

BTW who says we only shoot with cameras at work ;)

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No , i thought spraying was common practice everywhere
I never said anything about poplar being in demand for logging
Last is u Joel . u again win the prize ... that's the nicest moose from Ont I've seen . Your comments are drying up . u shud too :) I was right all along ... wanna be biologist trying to hunt... I still ask you stay off my threads ..pls
 
It isn't your thread it's a public forum and I am not talking to you. I'm posting pictures and having convos with people I like.

Sorry you have to see it. If you want safe spaces try a college.
 
It will be 20 years this year since we last logged our 700 acres. It was the best thing we ever did for our hunt camp. We are looking into getting it done again this winter. Better hunting and good money gets put back into the camp

glad to hear .. in some areas this is true . I should of thought of all the diff terrain
 
It isn't your thread it's a public forum and I am not talking to you. I'm posting pictures and having convos with people I like.

Sorry you have to see it. If you want safe spaces try a college.

YOU sure seem to follow me around .. ruining all threads and keeping them in the ditch ... your attitude is bad and childish ... move on
 
Wresting with a pig comes to mind...

R.

This is hilarious... The berries are there after spraying... it's called herbicide for reason... it doesn't kill fruit

Still not sure how you think logging kills bears? You figure they den up in those huge spruce tree stumps or something?:onCrack:
And even if they did... that particular site would be identified, flagged, and given a wide berth... as per the rules and regulations pertaining to habitat and disturbance.

R.

well mR Rman have a look, this is in conversation about round up / glyphosate ..Mr Rman and Joel are nothing more than train wrecks and argue for nothing the . We have enuf bio's here to ruin our wildlife ... You guys need to wake up to these 2
 
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Not an overly experienced big game hunter, 1st time out was 2 seasons ago, up in 21b. Every cutline was hunted, was a busy place. We had 7 guys, I personally walked at least 200 km in the week I was there mostly on cutlines, various stages of regrowth. Never saw 1 bear den, or even a place a bear would consider making one, except the bear I believe I heard along the side of some old growth along a huge bluff line, which would have made for good den material.
 
Nice doe.

Logging roads are often torn up with a cat so people can't road hunt through them and I think that helps keep pressure off the animals.

Where is this if you don't mind me asking, jb? If it isn't somewhere I've already come across while doing a synthesis, I'd love to see what I can find to help sell the policy in certain places here. I think the Province is open to it, considering what I've heard so far. But more helps.
 
Where is this if you don't mind me asking, jb? If it isn't somewhere I've already come across while doing a synthesis, I'd love to see what I can find to help sell the policy in certain places here. I think the Province is open to it, considering what I've heard so far. But more helps.

Road deactivation is common in BC, for a variety of reasons including wildlife management.
 
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