Record size grizzlies of bc

H4831

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
151   0   0
Location
BC
Interesting to note that only one bear in Alaska, in the Boone and Crocket books of North America, is larger than these two BC monsters, that are tied in score.

Gary Shelton has shot his share of grizzlies over the years, but the bear he's likely to be remembered for is the one he didn't even kill.

In 1970, Shelton was on a hunting trip near Green Lake, south of Highway 20 between the Bella Coola Valley and Anahim Lake in the west Chilcotin.

While walking along the edge of a high-elevation meadow, he spotted an animal skeleton so big he assumed it to be a moose.

Then he tripped over a grass-covered skull with canine teeth, and realized a bear had died here.

A very large bear.

So big, Shelton figures that at any given time only one of its kind could possibly roam the B.C. coast, an area that today is fittingly known as the Great Bear Rainforest.

Shelton estimated the bruin topped 1,000 pounds (454 kg), dwarfing the 550 to 750 pounds that adult male grizzlies typically weigh on the coast.

"A bear that size is unusual," he reflects from his home in Hagensborg in the Bella Coola Valley. "Think of a horse with short legs."

By counting the annual growth rings on a premolar tooth he reckoned the bear had lived at least 40 years, the sort of age that only a grizzly with strength and cunning and luck can achieve. So old that more than half his spinal column had been fused by arthritis.

Grizzly skulls are calculated by adding the maximum width and length, which, in the case of Shelton's bear skull, produced a score of 271/8 inches (about 70 cm).

The Montana-based Boone and Crockett Club, which maintains hunting records for North America, reports that the skull remains tied with a bear shot in the Dean River in 1982 as the biggest grizzly of recorded time in B.C. Throughout North America, only a 1976 specimen from Lone Mountain, Alaska, proved to be a hair bigger, at 2713/16 inches.

Shelton says he tends to keep his story about the record grizzly skull and other king-sized bears he has shot to himself because he doesn't feel it's something you should brag about.

The Vancouver Sun only found out about it through Boone and Crockett.

"It's a personal thing," he says. "I rarely talk about it and few people know."

Shelton is not known for shying away from bears or publicity. He is the author of three best-selling books on bear attacks, and has taught courses to thousands of government and industry workers on how to act in bear country.

His very public views on bear management have made him reviled by conservationists, even as another famous grizzly hunter from the Bella Coola Valley, the late aboriginal Clayton Mack, remains revered, his larger-than-life tales spun into two popular books.

Shelton argues that grizzly populations are growing in B.C. and the Ministry of Environment should allow more hunting of them. Male grizzlies are even showing up on northern Vancouver Island, where historically they have not existed.

"Bear hunters have been labelled horrible people," he laments. "But what the hell are you going to do with all these bears?"

Here is the whole story, including the outlook of future BC grizzly hunting.

http://www.vancouversun.com/Technology/Trophy+hunters+line+fire/1693303/story.html
 
Really interesting - I would love to see a bear that big from a distance :)

I grew up in northern BC where you would see black/browns/grizzly all the time and even a kermode now and then...
 
Let's not forget that coastal grizzlies in B.C. are still considered grizzlies as far as B&C are concerned,but all grizzlies in Alaska within 50 milers of the Pacific coast are considered brown bears.That does give B.C. a huge advantage as far as grizzlies are concerned.
 
The big bear that Gary Shelton found, had been shot a lot more than fifty miles from the coast.
 
The big bear that Gary Shelton found, had been shot a lot more than fifty miles from the coast.

My point being is that if all grizzly bears,including the Alaskan coastal bears were considered,there would be far fewer B.C. grizzly bears in such high positions in the B&C record book.When considering all grizzly bears in the book,the bear found by Shelton,would be a few hundred spots from the top.It seems silly that a bear could be considered a B.C. grizzly one day,then if he walks a mile into Alaska,he suddenly becomes a brown bear.Then if that same bear walks 50 miles inland,he becomes a grizzly again.
 
i have family in Bella Coola and had spent many summers there fishing the rivers and creeks. My uncle actually illustrated one of Clayton Macks books. I have come across lots of bears in my travels there. A few years later, I got a job working in The Dean Valley at a steelhead resort. While out guiding clients, we would eat lunch at the same spot every day. On one particular day, we stopped for lunch on the sandbar and to my surprise, there is a HUGE pile of bear shat next to the camp fire. Now, i am not claiming to have ever seen that bear, BUT, i did put a set of fishing regs over his paw print in the soft sand and the regs basically fit in just its pad. Little to say, i was a little weary for the next few days. So, yeah, there are some HUGE bears up there.
 
i have family in Bella Coola and had spent many summers there fishing the rivers and creeks. My uncle actually illustrated one of Clayton Macks books. I have come across lots of bears in my travels there. A few years later, I got a job working in The Dean Valley at a steelhead resort. While out guiding clients, we would eat lunch at the same spot every day. On one particular day, we stopped for lunch on the sandbar and to my surprise, there is a HUGE pile of bear shat next to the camp fire. Now, i am not claiming to have ever seen that bear, BUT, i did put a set of fishing regs over his paw print in the soft sand and the regs basically fit in just its pad. Little to say, i was a little weary for the next few days. So, yeah, there are some HUGE bears up there.

You probably also know Gary Shelton, too. I have had phone and email communication with him.
That was a mighty big footprint you saw! I wonder how far away he was from you at some point in time?
I wonder how it would compare in size to the scratch down a tree that I have recorded, that was eleven inches from outside toe to the other outside toe, in the tree scratch.
This fellow wasn't near the coast, but was in northern BC, about central. Those of you who have my book will know what I am talking about. But the book is not about bears, this was just an aside part.
 
My point being is that if all grizzly bears,including the Alaskan coastal bears were considered,there would be far fewer B.C. grizzly bears in such high positions in the B&C record book.When considering all grizzly bears in the book,the bear found by Shelton,would be a few hundred spots from the top.It seems silly that a bear could be considered a B.C. grizzly one day,then if he walks a mile into Alaska,he suddenly becomes a brown bear.Then if that same bear walks 50 miles inland,he becomes a grizzly again.

Good point and the same can be said for Canada moose coming from far Northern BC. As soon as they cross into the Yukon, it's Alaska/Yukon moose with a higher min. score.
 
Great read, thanks for posting. I have no idea bears could live that long. I seen on Relentless Pursuit, Tim Wells the host, shot a grizzly with his compound at like 20 yards in the head. Dropped instantly and they aged the boar to be around 26 years old. AMAZING, I'd love to see a grizzly in my lifetime,
 
Back
Top Bottom