How am I supposed to know which ones are HIS and which ones are wild?
How do we know this hunter knew this was a tame bear? We don't, so why are people targeting him in comments or did I miss something? I might have.
For years, I hunted an area north of the city because there were some very large white tail in the area, very large compared to others. I took a couple bucks and a nice, large, fat doe. Only last year did I learn that a farmer in the area was treating them as pets and hand feeding them. He even has signs around his yard that say "please don't shoot my deer". I only saw them for the first time as I had been hunting a couple km down the road.
I never knew, I don't feel bad that I did and I won't stop hunting in my usual area. Will I hunt around his house because I know there are tame deer there? No, but I won't stop hunting the area altogether.
How am I supposed to know which ones are HIS and which ones are wild?
But, we are told the hunter knew full well about the bear, as he tried to get it for several years.
How much did he know about the bear?Had he seen it before, but not had the opportunity to kill it, or did he actually know that the bear was someone's pet? I used to hunt individual bucks,that I had seen for a few years,but I can't guarantee that nobody was feeding them.Come to think of it,I never did see some of them during an open season.![]()
You guys are right, he didn't own the bear, he shouldn't have fed it and it was legal for the shooter to shoot it.
But, we are told the hunter knew full well about the bear, as he tried to get it for several years. Therefore, in my books, it was poor sportsmanship for him to shoot the tame bear.
However, the term, "sportsmanship," as it refers to hunters, has so changed since I started hunting, that it is no longer recognizable. For example, none of the old time recreational hunters would shoot ducks on the water. Now, it has been discussed on these threads and the concencous was that it was legal to shoot ducks on the water, so why not?
To an earlier age of hunters, getting game was a challenge. Thus one of the greatest senses of achievment was to go into the bush on foot, and shoot an animal on their own terms, in the animals own envirement, where it had a good chance of survival. When I was a teenager I went out on the morning of the first snow of the year, got a glimpse of a whitetail, followed it all day and shot it at three in the afternoon. To me, that was a great sense of achievment.
On another very similar day, first snow of the year, I went out and within half an hour put up two elk. I followed them all day, got a couple of glimpses and just at dark got a hail-mary shot. This time the animals won, but I had a great day and still remember every detail.
I'm not preaching to anyone, or telling them how they should hunt. I am merely explaining how hunting has evolved, and why there are decidedly different views on the hunter shooting the huge, tame bear.
Back then the bear would have been shot because it was a nuisance. Likely not even in bear season.
Those saying the guy should be arrested for feeding wildlife...how do you reconcile this with bear baiting![]()
Those saying the guy should be arrested for feeding wildlife...how do you reconcile this with bear baiting
I am wading in,I believe the hunters knew the bear was the old mans pet and shot it,because it was a trophy.Has every bear hunter in the area not have a chance to shoot this bear or have they passed because they knew the old man had a pet bear??????Legal sure,moral sure,does it mater in the end it is just a bear.



























