How to extract a bear from 300 yards downhill

I'll have to take a few pics of the Powerwagon next time I'm home.
Warn 8274 on the front and it's got an improvised 'Gin Pole' at the front of the deck. Cut-off 4.5 casing for an dead roll on the back. Throw the winch line over and winch them up on the deck. Double batteries; a dedicated deep cycle with a solenoid to isolate it from the main electrical of the truck. Winch til it gets draggy, then flip the solenoid and take a break til it recharges. Isolate and continue.
 
bring a crazy-carpet and some knife/axe, chop it up and pack it.
how do you think they did back in the days?

In the 'Old Days' this story would be told by a Pot bellied stove in the general store, not on an internet forum. And it probably wouldn't even have been shot as dragging it out with a team would have been too time consuming.
 
bring a crazy-carpet and some knife/axe, chop it up and pack it.
how do you think they did back in the days?

Crazy carpet?
I would hope that those who don't have a truck and winch nearby and/or want to make sure the hide remains intact would know enough to skin and debone, then pack it out. It's generally what's done for retrieving game in mountainous areas.
 
I used to use a crazy carpet. A few years ago, I bought a 6' Pelican toboggan. Extractions are WAY easier! Although I can't get an entire moose in it at once...I CAN get 300lbs of bear to stay, a 400lb bull elk (less the head), and whitetail are a breeze! Towing, pulling, winching...had to do it all, lots of times. I even pulled a 180lb buck out of a river bed with my Golf and a block and tackle. Rope was only 100' long so it made for some extra walking, but it was all I had and that dang buck went downhill instead of falling down where I shot him. The nerve!
 
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The kid just hunkers down and gets the forelegs over his shoulders from the back, gets a good grip, stands up with the whole bear on his back and carries it back to the truck !!!! Getting saturated in bear blood doesn't seem to bother him..........

Sounds like a recipe for getting shot. Some of the yahoo's I have come across out there? Last thing I would do is carry it on my shoulders like that. As a youngster my Grandfather taught me to carry antlers upside down for that very reason.
 
I had to do the same thing about 12 years ago to a whitetail buck I shot in the bottom of a valley, was just pure lucky that I had enough rope behind the truck seat to reach him! With age comes wisdom, and I think twice before pulling the trigger these days when animals are in less than ideal locations for recovery!
 
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