Colorado Bear, mule deer have different problems, same solution

Bears and mule deer continued to dominate the conversation among members of Colorado’s Parks and Wildlife Commission (PWC) and the sportsmen’s community at large during the monthly PWC meeting in Grand Junction on Thursday, albeit for converse reasons.

Commissioners taking on the annual task of approving limited big game hunting license recommendations for 2013 were once again reminded that Colorado has too many bears and not nearly enough mule deer to meet wildlife management objectives. Yet the short-term approach to both issues is the same: Increase the number of hunting licenses for both species.

The 20 percent increase in bear hunting licenses over 2012 by far outpaces the boost in license numbers for any other big game animal, although the sum of 21,167 bear licenses available in 2013 can’t compare with opportunities to hunt more popular big game animals like deer and elk. But state wildlife managers have made clear their intention to continue efforts to reduce Colorado’s black bear population conservatively estimated at about 18,000, and they’re looking at hunters for help. The predicted hunter harvest from the 2013 license allocation is 1,373 bears.

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Written by: Scott Willoughby or 303-954-1993
Source: The Denver Post
Bear Hunting Blog

Colorado Bear Hunting Tips by Tom Beck

Bear Hunting in Colorado

“The key to hunting Colorado black bears in September is understanding that the physiology and behavior of bears dramatically change in mid-August., says Tom Beck, Wildlife Researcher.

Black Bear Behavior; The key to hunting Colorado black bears in September is understanding that the physiology and behavior of bears dramatically change in mid-August. Black bears enter a period of hyperphagia, or feeding frenzy. More importantly, they change their diet. Where leaves and flowers of broad-leafed plants and insects had dominated the summer diet, bears switch to a fall diet of fruits and nuts.. Fruits and nuts provide the high fat and carbohydrates needed to put on fat for winter hibernation. Many bears actively forage up to 20 hours per day during the fall feeding frenzy. This contrasts with 2-4 hours of active foraging during much of the spring and summer. Areas of good fruit and nut production are known to bears over a wide area. Often bears make migrations of 20-30 miles from their summer range to traditional fall ranges. Nearly all bears concentrate at the lower-elevation habitats where fruits and nuts are abundant from mid-August to late-September or early-October.

Habitat; What does this mean for the bear hunter? First, the location of bears is highly predictable during September. Second, where you observed black bear sign and activity in mid-summer is irrelevant. Keep in mind you are pursuing an animal that may have a resident home range of 20-200 square miles, may migrate 30 miles for fruit and can travel 15 miles during a day of rambling.

Best bear hunting success can be found in areas with abundant fruits and nuts. The species of fruit is not all that important and will vary around the state. Fruits of serviceberry, chokecherry, pin cherry, squawapple, mountain ash, buffaloberry and currant are all eaten by Colorado black bears. The primary nut producing trees are Gambel oak and pinon pine.

Many bears will feed at the same site but usually at different times. Intuitively one would think that a bear would find a productive site and stay there until all the fruit/nuts were eaten. However, bears rarely do this. More often they move on after filling their belly and look for new sites. They will likely return to good sites periodically. During the feeding frenzy, each bear may defecate 5-15 times daily; thus bear sign is abundant. A casual examination will guide hunters to the specific species of fruits being used and will narrow the area to be hunted. Most of the better fruit areas are at the lower elevations of bear habitat, often distant from the pine and spruce-fir forests that many hunters associate with bears. The fruit-producing areas may not be adjacent to summer habitat. For instance, in some high-elevation parks, bears may travel across several miles of sagebrush-dominated mountains to lower canyons where chokecherries are found along streams. Bears move across open sagebrush at night, but actively forage in riparian zone throughout the day. Wherever ‘oakbrush thickets’ dominate the mountains, you can count on finding black bears in September.

If you hunt an area with poor fall bear foods, you may want to look at nearby areas (up to 30 miles away) where bears could migrate to. Hunting on travel zones may be productive when bears return to their summer range. These return migrations usually occur in late September or early October. Bears are like us in many ways; they travel the paths of least resistance during long trips, so scout natural passes and game trails. Still hunting in fruit/nut sites with abundant bear sign can be productive.

Read the rest of this article including the following topics below by clicking the active link; Colorado Bear Hunting

  • Identifying Bears
  • Care of the Meat and Pelt
  • How to Hunt Bears
  • Be Especially Careful in Identifying Your Target

Tips on Hunting Black Bears in September By Tom Beck, Wildlife Researcher

Source:  Colorado Parks and Wildlife
Bear Hunting Blog