Solo Bear Hunt by Canoe

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I am relatively new to the forum so I figured I'd post a story from last fall (August and September 2016) about one of my (successful - lots of them are not) hunts. I have been trying to take a bear by canoe for the last season 2 seasons (and the new distance requirements for baiting make this especially appealing). My first attempt was in the spring of 2015 and resulted in no bears seen and a camera lost overboard. My next attempt was in the spring of 2016 and had a lot more action and potential but I ran out of time. The third and final chapter was in the fall of 2016.

The first year I tried this I went about 8 hours from home and as a result my ability to monitor the bait and hunt it multiple times was limited. In 2016 I changed it up and chose a location on crown land about 4 hours from home (3 hour drive and 1 hour paddle). The setup for the fall and the spring in 2016 was essentially identical. Same location and same bait except instead of marshmellows (spring) I used jujubes in my mix for the fall hunt. The jujubes were left over from a summer camp where my youngest son was a counsellor and the price (free) was right. So the bait mix was as follows:

265 lbs whole corn - $31.80
75 lbs molasses - $22.50
44 lbs jujubes - free

Total bait cost $54.30

A couple of pics from the setup:

Loaded up and heading out to bait:



Unloaded:



Filling the barrel:



The setup barrel:



The view up the shooting lane to the ground blind:



This location is on crown and about a 1 hour paddle from the put in where I camped. The camp was mostly in the box of my truck. Those tent cots are handy and very comfortable. I brought some hydraulic assistance (if needed - on the trailer) to assist with loading (truck part only). In the canoe I also brought a 2000lb hand winch and recovery straps to assist with recovery if needed. The camp:



I hunted 2 different weekends but did not see anything on the first weekend. I think it was too warm and the bears were hitting the bait during the cooler dark times. I know they were there as there were piles of scat and and a scat trail leading to my blind which had been torn down, hubs turned inside out and several rips in the material. I fixed the blind as best as i could and hunted out of it on that first weekend and left it standing when i left. When i returned the second weekend it was the same drill:



I set the alarm for 5:00 am on the second weekend and shoved off with the canoe at 5:15 am. The temperature was +1 on my thermometer and there was light fog on the lake. The fog rendered my headlamp totally useless as the light was reflecting and the glare reduced visibility to 2 or 3 feet. Fortunately there was some moonlight and with the fog being light I was able to navigate with the lamp turned off. I was at the torn down blind at 6:20 am but decided not to use it. Instead I sat inside some young maples behind the blind with the tripod and hoped for the best. At 6:40 am (legal shooting start) I loaded the gun and waited.

At 7:00 am my bear came in and almost immediately presented a perfect broadside shot with the bait barrel on his off side. The bear was certainly not big but being as this was going to be my first attempt trying to get one out by canoe I decided to take him. I squeezed one off at his boiler room and my 35 Whelen sent a 250 grain partition his way. He immediately did a somersault and landed such that I could only see his hind quarters. As soon as he landed he snarled for a fraction of second and than switched to the death moan. He did not rise.

I decided to wait 15 or 20 minutes to be sure he was dead (I was fairly certain he was as he made the moan). After 10 minutes or so I notice some movement and thought what the #$%@. I got up thinking I had to put a second round into him and moved forward to get a view of his vitals. While moving forward my line of sight was momentarily blocked and during that time a bear gets up from his position and starts running away. It was about the same size and I thought what the ^*#%, this is not good. I take another 3 steps forward trying to get a line of sight on the fleeing bear and my bear comes back into sight and is laying right where I dropped him. A second bear had snuck in and was checking out the carcass - this was the bear now fleeing. Because my view was mostly blocked I never saw him come in.

The bear:



After passing thru the bullet punctured the bait barrel and then stuck in the offside of the barrel:



Offside deformation:



Loading him into the canoe I narrowly avoided tipping and going for a swim.

The loaded bear:



I used a shoreline rock that was slightly higher than the top of the canoe to to get him up and over the gunwale. The canoe is a 17'6" Bluewater Saugeen. It handles best if loaded to less than 680lbs but can handle 900lbs in calm conditions in a pinch:



I had him loaded by 8:00 am and was back at the put in about 9:00 am. By 11 am I had him dressed and camp broken down and everything loaded and was on the road back home. I stopped about 45 minutes into my drive and got 4 bags of ice to pack his chest cavity to enhance cooling. At the butcher he scaled 101 lbs dressed. Just about the perfect size for one guy and a canoe and probably some of the best table fare I have ever had.

For those interested the firearm of choice - 35 Whelen shooting 250 grain partitions loaded to 2500 fps:

 
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Really cool hunt man, thanks for sharing this story. I am fairly new to hunting, and its inspiring to see a solo hunt trip by canoe on crown land. Last fall I had some time off work but it was too little and too late in the season, baited a spot but all I got was some fisher and a young buck came by the camera once. looking forward to spring I've already started planning...My original plan was to take a bear with my bow, still considering it but now Ive got some nice shinny new tools :D
 
I have taken many, many tons of game out by canoe... bears, deer and moose.

Good job... canoes, allow you to get away from the crowds and pressure.
 
Great read, congrats on the successful hunt & thank you for sharing!

Cheers
Jay
P.S. I shot a bear last spring with my 35 Whelen, GREAT round!
 
I hunted the same way last fall for bear but I was unsuccessful. I took a small deer that decided to stroll by the barrel on the last day I had to hunt my spot instead. Nice to see you connected with a bear.
Good job.
You only have the holes on the top of the barrel unplugged and one small hole on bottom of barrel? I need to find a way to keep the racoons from emptying mine, your way would sure slow them down.
Cheer.
 
I hunted the same way last fall for bear but I was unsuccessful. I took a small deer that decided to stroll by the barrel on the last day I had to hunt my spot instead. Nice to see you connected with a bear.
Good job.
You only have the holes on the top of the barrel unplugged and one small hole on bottom of barrel? I need to find a way to keep the racoons from emptying mine, your way would sure slow them down.
Cheer.

Holes on top are open and there are 3 holes on the bottom. Bottom holes are 1 1/8 inch. The molasses slows down the corn as well. Bears stand on their hind legs and rock the barrel to dribble the food out. A full barrel like that lasts just about 2 weeks with multiple bears hitting it.
 
Holes on top are open and there are 3 holes on the bottom. Bottom holes are 1 1/8 inch. The molasses slows down the corn as well. Bears stand on their hind legs and rock the barrel to dribble the food out. A full barrel like that lasts just about 2 weeks with multiple bears hitting it.

Did you have to paddle back and get it or will you leave it there for next year?
 
Congrats, and thanks for posting; that was a good read.

You mention at the beginning of the post something about "the new distance requirements for baiting"...could you clarify this?
 
Congrats, and thanks for posting; that was a good read.

You mention at the beginning of the post something about "the new distance requirements for baiting"...could you clarify this?

It's a relatively new Ontario regulation. Baits have to be 500 metres from the nearest residence (including cottages/cabins) or public building. They also have to be at least 200 metres from any public trails or right of ways.
 
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