Here's what I did: I wrote Michael Platt, the dude that wrote that erroneous story. Here's the exchange of emails so far.
I maybe started on the wrong foot...
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To: Michael Platt
Sent: Thu May 17 19:38:07 2012
Subject: Pathetic
I read your dumb-ass biased, left-wing, Disney-fied version of bear hunting.
You are a f**king retard.
Jim.
On May 17, 2012, Michael Platt <Michael.Platt@sunmedia.ca> wrote:
Does your mommy know you're on her computer, swearing at people?
Naughty boy.
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To: Michael Platt
Sent: Fri May 18 09:10:26 2012
Subject: Re: Re: Pathetic
I'm 54 years old.
You should come bear hunting with me and learn what it's really about before spewing inaccurate, false stories.
Bear baiting is nothing like you've portrayed it. But you wouldn't care about reporting on the truth now would you.
You must be a ### eh?
From: Jim
On May 18, 2012, Michael Platt <Michael.Platt@sunmedia.ca> wrote:
Are you asking if I'm ### in a hopeful way? What do you guys do in those tree stands?
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I realized I was stupid to try to engage the guy in this way, so I decided to switch tactics...
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To: Michael Platt
Sent: Fri May 18 12:02:40 2012
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Pathetic
Michael, how about I'll quit with the stupid comments and then maybe we can discuss this on an adult level? My comments were stupid.
I hope that works for you.
Let me tell a few things about baiting, which btw, I never do. It's far too much work, far too time consuming and expensive. People that bait bears, haul food supplies into a remote site, every day or so, and for sometimes a month before they ever hunt it. I can't afford that. I do spot and stalk hunts for bears only.
There is a huge benefit to the bears. You likely have never thought of that. A bear comes out of the den HUNGRY. When they locate a food source, such as a bait site, the animal can quickly gain fat and strength through the food at that bait site.
When hunters go into a bait site, they are looking only to kill the large adult male black bears. Very few bears are actually shot; the vast majority that come into a bait site are small bears, or sows with cubs, which the hunter simply observes. Those are bears that benefit totally from this. A week or month or so, of extra high calorie nutrition that a bear can pick up from a bait site is extremely beneficial to the bear long term. They wander off after the baiting site is closed up, with a nice headstart on their summer weight gain.
Another benefit to this type hunting (whether the hunter is in a ground blind or treestand) is that the hunter can identify very clearly, sows versus boars. You never want to shoot a sow with cubs. Well this makes it way easier to identify those old boars, which is what we're after.
Hunting in this manner allows the hunter to watch many bears. They are fascinating to watch you know.
It may look like the hunter is 'shooting-fish-in-a-barrel', but it's not as simple as that. For one, the hunter has to remain quiet, motionless for hours at a time. Endure thousands of mosquitoes & black flies. IF... a big bear shows up, then they have to be able to move into a shot position without the bear sensing them. Again; not so simple as it might seem at first glance.
But if they do get that shot, then the ability to shoot accurately due to close range, concealment etc, helps the hunter. Because ultimately, when you do decide to kill an animal, you've got to be certain to kill that animal with the minimum suffering. A hunter, over bait, from some form of blind is much less likely to wound an animal, and cause undue suffering, and that's what's important.
I'm going on a hunt June 3rd, you're invited if you want to see what it's about. I'm going for 5 days. But it's spot and stalk. No baiting. And there's rough terrain, poor accomodations, no internet or TV, no phone service (poor company I suppose), grizzlies etc.
Let me know if you're intrerested.
Jim
On May 18, 2012, Michael Platt <Michael.Platt@sunmedia.ca> wrote:
Appreciate it Jim. And I appreciate the adult conversation. I'm not against bear hunting. And you make good points about baiting.
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This was another email I sent him this morning.
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Michael there's another point, which I want to stress; a bear that is feeding on a bait site, is not eating calf moose, or elk calves, or deer fawns. In fact, that bear may eat enough off a bait site, over a week or month or so, that it has no need to go and kill a calf or fawn that year.
The Saskatchewan Fish & Game Dept wanted to institute a moose draw, in an area called the Cumberland Delta (I don't know exactly where that is, maybe you do). This might have been 20 years ago or so now. It was covered in an article in Western Sportsman, way back in the day, when I still had a subscription. The area is prime moose habitat anyway.
So Sask' F&W took a moose census. After several years, they observed that moose numbers hadn't changed, so they decided to investigate. They commissioned a study and found that 65% of all moose calves were being killed by adult male black bears. That's 65% calf moose mortality, before wolves, severe winter, disease, or malnutrition even come into play.
When I go bear hunting, and I am successful in taking one adult male bear, I feel that in a very small way, I've helped the moose herd. Not just this year; those bears live for 20-ish years, and take calves every year.
Btw, wolf predation, severe winters, over-harvest by first nations, has pretty much decimated the moose population in this area. The moose need all the help they can get. So once again, a hunter, sitting over a bait can benefit those moose due to the fact that they are feeding bears and keeping maybe another calf moose or elk alive, that woulda gone into bear scat...
Jim.