The Hunter's Alaska by Chandler Roy F

The Hunter's Alaska by Chandler Roy F

Author:Chandler, Roy F. [Chandler, Roy F.]
Language: eng
Format: mobi
Publisher: Katherine R. Chandler
Published: 2015-02-04T16:00:00+00:00


Anyone who decides that he wants a grizzly and can then go out and locate one (without spotting from the air) is a mighty fine hunter. A coastal hunter may do that with some regularity when hunting brown bear down along the panhandle, but the grizzly is not found that easily. Grizzly locating can be long and frustrating.

To hunt a grizzly, you should at least know that a bear has been about. To simply choose a piece of terrain and start hunting will not be rewarding. If hunters have taken other game in an area, a grizzly is likely to move in and store the leavings for his own use. The big bears pull grass and brush over their kills and sometimes lie on top of them guarding until they are hungry.

More likely, a grizzly will bed down close by and come to his cache for a meal. So, old kills are good places to watch. Hunting in that manner is legal, but the result is little different from using bait—which is illegal in Alaska.

Grizzlies fish when salmon are running, but the fish are not around most of the time. If a hunter knows of a bear fishing place, however, he can wait until one he likes arrives.



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