โApr-18-2016 01:12 PM
โApr-21-2016 04:39 PM
naturist wrote:
I don't know if it's true, but I have been told that dogs attract bears. The bears see them as possible lunch.
โApr-19-2016 09:45 AM
toedtoes wrote:
Update
Apparently the man and his companion were hunting bear when he got mauled by the bear...
โApr-19-2016 08:23 AM
โApr-19-2016 04:11 AM
โApr-18-2016 10:39 PM
โApr-18-2016 09:09 PM
SteveAE wrote:
Leave them alone and, more than likely, they will leave you alone. They are beautiful creatures. Enjoy their presence and take joy in knowing that there are still wild places left for them to live.
โApr-18-2016 08:55 PM
โApr-18-2016 08:47 PM
fishhogg wrote:
It is actually the best time to hunt bear. They have not ate all winter, meat is prime as well as the hide.
โApr-18-2016 07:36 PM
tonymull wrote:It is actually the best time to hunt bear. They have not ate all winter, meat is prime as well as the hide.toedtoes wrote:
Update
Apparently the man and his companion were hunting bear when he got mauled by the bear...
Spring bear hunts....many reasons they are a poor choice. Especially in the far north.
โApr-18-2016 06:45 PM
โApr-18-2016 05:20 PM
toedtoes wrote:
Update
Apparently the man and his companion were hunting bear when he got mauled by the bear...
โApr-18-2016 05:17 PM
naturist wrote:
Hey, while we're on the subject of bears, if you are going camping in bear country, USE THE FLIPPING BEAR BOXES or learn how to stow your food in the trees.
I'm camp hosting in May in a National Forest Service campground in the Blue Ridge Mountains, just like I did last year, and you wouldn't believe the people who simply do not believe a bear would bother their tent, their campsite, their cooler. Be safe, don't feed the bears. And save yourself the several hundred dollar fine for leaving food around your campsite where the bears can get it.
โApr-18-2016 05:15 PM
โApr-18-2016 04:43 PM