BriBri
05-26-2009, 03:29 PM
I just returned from a week-long black bear hunt (over bait). I'll post some pictures tonight when I get home from work. This was my first black bear hunt, and I definitely got the bear-hunting bug now. Here's the story:
A buddy from my sportsmen's club invited me up to an outfitter in New Brunswick (outside of Plaster Rock) for the bear hunt last week. There were four of us up there for the hunt - all of us were from Massachusetts. The weather was great....sunny or slightly overcast every day, with temps in the upper 50's to low 60s except for Thursday which was a bit hot (high of 86F). Evenings were cool, but I actually sleep better when it's on the cool side.
Aside from the hunting, the best part of the trip was the food! There were two (very attractive, I must say) girls who did all the cooking, and it was excellent. The best home cooking I have ever had in my life (hopefully my wife won't read this). I definitely gained about 10 lbs from all the great eggs, bacon, moose meat, turkey, pies and other goodies I had all week - I even think my cholesterol went up a few points. But IT WAS WORTH IT!
We arrived on Saturday, the 16th, as it was a 7+ hour drive from where we live, and we wanted to get there Saturday night so that we could sleep late on Sunday morning and have a relaxing day before hunting started on the Monday. On Sunday, we drove around with the guides checking the baits to see which barrrels were being hit and to decide where we wanted to setup for Monday. As I was hunting with my .270 Tikka T3 (I was shooting Remington 150gr SP Core-Lokts), I wanted to see what baits stands had the best setups for rifles. I chose one stand that was about 43 yards away from the barrel - the stand was in the middle of a grove of fir trees about 10 feet off the ground, so I was well-hidden. The shooting lane was perfect, and I had hopes that a bear would come in, as the barrel had been hit the previous night. Around 3pm I got set up in the stand and kept a close eye on the barrel and surrounding area, as I wasn't sure where the bear(s) would make their entrance. Well, it wasn't meant to happen that night, as the biggest animals I saw were the field mice scurrying around the brush pile near the foot of my tree. So, around 9:30pm, I called it a day (my guide picked me up a few yards from the stand). Fortunately, one the other hunters shot his bear Monday night (around 8:30pm) with his 30-06. His bear had a live weight of 150#, with a beautiful jet-black coat. I think he was going to make a rug of it. We all retired to the living room of the camp, sipping Crown Royals and hoping for a better Tuesday.
On Tuesday, I was up early - not sure why - but I was able to get the first crack at the coffee pot. For some reason, the girls (who set up the coffee the previous night) only setup enought coffee for one or two cups person. Oh well. I guess caffeine is a better-choice drug than others. After breakfast, we checked the baits again, and I decided to try another bait stand that had been getting hit for several of the previous nights. The setup was as great as the first stand....perfect for rifle shooters - about 48 yards from treestand to barrel. My sitting position in this stand was so comfortable that I almost fell asleep a few times. However, I was able to keep watch in case a big bruin crept up in their silent stepping manner. Around 9pm, I had all but given up hope of seeing anything that night, and started to pack up for the night. One thing I learned that night is that you should always be at the ready as long as there is decent shooting light left, because you never know what will happen. As it was, around 9:25pm, with barely a glimmer of shooting light remaining, a black blob lumbered out of the trees from behind the barrel (from my line of sight). It was hard to tell how big it was, but I slowly brought up my rifle in preparation for a shot. And, wounldn't you know it....just as I was about to place the crosshairs on the black object sniffing the opening of the barrel, I see the headlights of my guides pickup truck coming down the logging trail (more like an ATV path). Just then, the black ghost bolts back to from whence it came, and I let out a deep sigh saying to myself "If he (my guide) had come only two minutes later, I might have bagged a bear." Oh well...back to camp with hopes for a successful hunt on Wednesday.
TO BE CONTINUED......
A buddy from my sportsmen's club invited me up to an outfitter in New Brunswick (outside of Plaster Rock) for the bear hunt last week. There were four of us up there for the hunt - all of us were from Massachusetts. The weather was great....sunny or slightly overcast every day, with temps in the upper 50's to low 60s except for Thursday which was a bit hot (high of 86F). Evenings were cool, but I actually sleep better when it's on the cool side.
Aside from the hunting, the best part of the trip was the food! There were two (very attractive, I must say) girls who did all the cooking, and it was excellent. The best home cooking I have ever had in my life (hopefully my wife won't read this). I definitely gained about 10 lbs from all the great eggs, bacon, moose meat, turkey, pies and other goodies I had all week - I even think my cholesterol went up a few points. But IT WAS WORTH IT!
We arrived on Saturday, the 16th, as it was a 7+ hour drive from where we live, and we wanted to get there Saturday night so that we could sleep late on Sunday morning and have a relaxing day before hunting started on the Monday. On Sunday, we drove around with the guides checking the baits to see which barrrels were being hit and to decide where we wanted to setup for Monday. As I was hunting with my .270 Tikka T3 (I was shooting Remington 150gr SP Core-Lokts), I wanted to see what baits stands had the best setups for rifles. I chose one stand that was about 43 yards away from the barrel - the stand was in the middle of a grove of fir trees about 10 feet off the ground, so I was well-hidden. The shooting lane was perfect, and I had hopes that a bear would come in, as the barrel had been hit the previous night. Around 3pm I got set up in the stand and kept a close eye on the barrel and surrounding area, as I wasn't sure where the bear(s) would make their entrance. Well, it wasn't meant to happen that night, as the biggest animals I saw were the field mice scurrying around the brush pile near the foot of my tree. So, around 9:30pm, I called it a day (my guide picked me up a few yards from the stand). Fortunately, one the other hunters shot his bear Monday night (around 8:30pm) with his 30-06. His bear had a live weight of 150#, with a beautiful jet-black coat. I think he was going to make a rug of it. We all retired to the living room of the camp, sipping Crown Royals and hoping for a better Tuesday.
On Tuesday, I was up early - not sure why - but I was able to get the first crack at the coffee pot. For some reason, the girls (who set up the coffee the previous night) only setup enought coffee for one or two cups person. Oh well. I guess caffeine is a better-choice drug than others. After breakfast, we checked the baits again, and I decided to try another bait stand that had been getting hit for several of the previous nights. The setup was as great as the first stand....perfect for rifle shooters - about 48 yards from treestand to barrel. My sitting position in this stand was so comfortable that I almost fell asleep a few times. However, I was able to keep watch in case a big bruin crept up in their silent stepping manner. Around 9pm, I had all but given up hope of seeing anything that night, and started to pack up for the night. One thing I learned that night is that you should always be at the ready as long as there is decent shooting light left, because you never know what will happen. As it was, around 9:25pm, with barely a glimmer of shooting light remaining, a black blob lumbered out of the trees from behind the barrel (from my line of sight). It was hard to tell how big it was, but I slowly brought up my rifle in preparation for a shot. And, wounldn't you know it....just as I was about to place the crosshairs on the black object sniffing the opening of the barrel, I see the headlights of my guides pickup truck coming down the logging trail (more like an ATV path). Just then, the black ghost bolts back to from whence it came, and I let out a deep sigh saying to myself "If he (my guide) had come only two minutes later, I might have bagged a bear." Oh well...back to camp with hopes for a successful hunt on Wednesday.
TO BE CONTINUED......