I will be the first person to admit that I don't take black bears too serious. A couple weeks ago we had that run-in with Yellow Face, when he was bluff charging and threat displaying. That bear never concerned me.
But I had an experience tonight that did.
I'll post the sequence of pictures that I took, the story can sorta be seen, just from them.
I was on my ATV mooching along slowly, just north of my moose hunting camp. On the loggin trail I spotted some smoking fresh bear tracks. I knew the bear had just travelled through and there could be a chance of running into him.
Well I maybe went 100 yards and there he was. I stopped and glassed him. The bear moved away. At first I thought he had spooked and run, but I peeked around the corner and there he was.
So I stopped the quad, grabbed my camera and then I thought, "What the heck, take the .338WM just in case..."
The bear moving casually along.
I'm including every pic, even though these 4 look pretty much identical. The thing is the bear was already throwing up warning signals here. He was aware of me, but just stood and looked, while I took these 4 pics.
Then he goes back to feeding like I am not even there...
It's actually not black but a dark, dark chocolate brown with a tan muzzle. Nice looking bear; he's 6' and maybe just a bit over. A very solid bear.
I whistled at him here.
He is again aware and looking at me but is not afraid. Hmmm...
Now he stands up to look at me.
As soon as he dropped down to all-fours I could see something about his body language that was not right. Plus he hopped stiff-legged and did a bluff charge after this pic...
And now he starts to come.
When he hit this log and hit that pose I knew things were not good.
And he keeps coming...
And coming...
After that last picture, which was like 35 yards, the bear was not stopping and was advancing steadily. All his body language said that he was going to f**k me up!
At that point I put the camera away and I yelled at the bear. It did not pause.
I knew things were at the point where I would shoot him or he was going to come big-time, right away. So I took the only option left, right after he came off that log, I fired into the mud about 6" in front of and dead-center of the f**kers feet, with my .338WM. That stopped him and made him dance backwards 10'.
But you know, that goddamn bear did not run. He just walked away.
As I walked back to my ATV I kept glancing back because "he was not your average bear". He definitely had my attention.
After I got on the quad and drove up around the corner, goddamn if that son-of-a-##### was not still right there on the logging trail. And then he went into the display s**t, where he started biting every tree he came to!
Then he started jaw popping! And finally he made an exaggerated display of aggressively feeding right in front of me; really ripping out big clots of grass.
So at that point I just wanted to be rid of the prick and I suddenly hammered the throttle of the quad and accelerated right at him. That finally made him break and run, and I was some glad to see him run off.
I have one major problem though, we might have trouble with him come fall hunting season. The fact that a .338WM right at his feet, did not make him run is bad, very bad. I probably should have shot the bastard.
So he has earned the nick-name Bad News, and altered my opinion of black bears.
But I had an experience tonight that did.
I'll post the sequence of pictures that I took, the story can sorta be seen, just from them.
I was on my ATV mooching along slowly, just north of my moose hunting camp. On the loggin trail I spotted some smoking fresh bear tracks. I knew the bear had just travelled through and there could be a chance of running into him.
Well I maybe went 100 yards and there he was. I stopped and glassed him. The bear moved away. At first I thought he had spooked and run, but I peeked around the corner and there he was.
So I stopped the quad, grabbed my camera and then I thought, "What the heck, take the .338WM just in case..."
The bear moving casually along.
I'm including every pic, even though these 4 look pretty much identical. The thing is the bear was already throwing up warning signals here. He was aware of me, but just stood and looked, while I took these 4 pics.
Then he goes back to feeding like I am not even there...
It's actually not black but a dark, dark chocolate brown with a tan muzzle. Nice looking bear; he's 6' and maybe just a bit over. A very solid bear.
I whistled at him here.
He is again aware and looking at me but is not afraid. Hmmm...
Now he stands up to look at me.
As soon as he dropped down to all-fours I could see something about his body language that was not right. Plus he hopped stiff-legged and did a bluff charge after this pic...
And now he starts to come.
When he hit this log and hit that pose I knew things were not good.
And he keeps coming...
And coming...
After that last picture, which was like 35 yards, the bear was not stopping and was advancing steadily. All his body language said that he was going to f**k me up!
At that point I put the camera away and I yelled at the bear. It did not pause.
I knew things were at the point where I would shoot him or he was going to come big-time, right away. So I took the only option left, right after he came off that log, I fired into the mud about 6" in front of and dead-center of the f**kers feet, with my .338WM. That stopped him and made him dance backwards 10'.
But you know, that goddamn bear did not run. He just walked away.
As I walked back to my ATV I kept glancing back because "he was not your average bear". He definitely had my attention.
After I got on the quad and drove up around the corner, goddamn if that son-of-a-##### was not still right there on the logging trail. And then he went into the display s**t, where he started biting every tree he came to!
Then he started jaw popping! And finally he made an exaggerated display of aggressively feeding right in front of me; really ripping out big clots of grass.
So at that point I just wanted to be rid of the prick and I suddenly hammered the throttle of the quad and accelerated right at him. That finally made him break and run, and I was some glad to see him run off.
I have one major problem though, we might have trouble with him come fall hunting season. The fact that a .338WM right at his feet, did not make him run is bad, very bad. I probably should have shot the bastard.
So he has earned the nick-name Bad News, and altered my opinion of black bears.


















































