black bears are the most cowardly animals in the world. .....................smells like a "big bag of rotting urine". ..................The two that I've helped to drag out were NOT fun
figure I've shot, guided, and helped with 22-24 bears now.
Never had one smell like piss
bears are easily spooked but ANYTHING BUT cowardly when cornered, wounded, or protecting their kill/young.
bears have on of the strongest "will to survive" of any animal i've encountered. never underestimate one for a second.
that being said, with proper bullet placement they can be killed very rapidly and easily
A couple tips for the new bear hunter (I'll try to make this post "helpful" for once" :
Play the wind. worry not about camo, scentlock, and other bull####. play the wind. a bears nose is king, eyes see motion well but does not recognise "people" shape at distances much over 100yrds if you're not moving about. move when the bear moves, or has it's head down to feed. watch the eyes as thebigger ones will "fake feed" and watch you, if you're presence is known, often waiting for you to get closer (this is a creepy scenario, best avoided). one it knows you're there the gig is up, move on.
never rush. if a bear is feeding, chances are he'll be there a LONG time. they get into a good patch of grub and park their asses. if they don't know you're about, and are eating, you have all day to get set up and shoot true.
EVERYTHING comes down to the first shot. make it a good one. follow up shots, no matter how competent the marksman are NEVER as accurate as shot #1. the effectiveness of the second shot is dramatically less on game. that being said if you can still see the bear after shot 1, and feel concerned, no harm in shooting again.
shoot behind, and as close to, the shoulder as possible. bears pile up good and fast with a pnumothorax. a hole in a lung is a dead bear 100% of the time. don;t worry about breaking shoulders, a good heart/lung hit and the yogi wont be using his legs long anyways.
after the shot, wait 20mins. USE A WATCH. 20mins feels like a long ass time after a shot. a well hit bear will usually drop where it stands or make a pair of death bounds into the trees. wait 20mins. if the bear is not hit well giving it time to crawl under a log and stiffen up/bleed out is a good thing. unpressed I have never seen a bear go more then 40yrds. wait 20mins. have a coffee, smoke, etc.
directly after the shot mark your shooting position with flagging tape. after the 20mins walk directly to the spot you shot bear and mark it.
bears are awful for blood trail. thick hair soaks up blood, and the large stores of fat under the hide effectively seal wounds quickly. hence the flagging tape. another reason to wait 20mins.
when going in after a bear move very slowly. don;t speak. don;t chat with your buddy. listen for anything moving. weazing is a great size of a well hit bear. as is crying or moaning. look for a TINY bear. 7ft+ bears can roll up into a ball the size of a sleeping black lab. look under logs, roots, etc. they will usually try to but the wounded side down.
bears tend to always run in the direction they are pointed. never aproch your "dead" bear from the snarly end. toss a rock at it when you're close enough and look for any twitch. watch very carefully for breathing or paw/toe flexing. just this last spring we aproched a bear after a solid chest hit with a .338mag, that was piled up, "dead". it stood up and came back at us. 2 more 338 slugs put it down for good. a bear is never dead untill you;re taking pictures with it. well, not even then, but that's a story for Bullcoon to tell....
Bring Rope. bears have wide wrists and the hair is slippery, they are hard to hold on to. tie back legs together then secure a leash around the center (between the paws) then to a big stick. yes it;s against the grain hair wisem but then you don;t deal with a bobbing head. bear hair is tough, don;t worry about buggering up the hide by dragging. oh yeah, gut it first. this will drop 30%+ of the body weight.