MD Bear Hunting Case placed on Stet Docket

CUMBERLAND — The case of a LaVale man accused of hunting bears during closed season was placed on the stet docket Tuesday, eliminating a jury trial slated for Wednesday in Allegany County Circuit Court and denying the defendant the privilege to hunt for two years.

Charles Frederick Evans III, 31, was charged by Natural Resources Police Officer Cory Garver on the first day of the Maryland deer firearms season in November with shooting two bears, a 180-pound sow that died and a cub that was not recovered, in spite of an effort by a Department of Natural Resources tracking dog. The incident took place on the Green Ridge State Forest along Dailey Road southeast of Oldtown.

The decision to use the stet docket was made Tuesday morning during a case status conference. Evans was represented by Assistant Public Defender James F. Elliott.

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Source:  Cumberland Times-News
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Michigan Bear Hunting Licenses available now through June 1st.

MI Bear Hunting

“There will be 7,906 bear hunting licenses available for the 2013 hunting seasons. Bear licenses are available for both residents and nonresidents.” [Bear Hunting Blog File Photo]

LANSING— The DNR reminds hunters that applications for Michigan bear hunting licenses are available now through June 1.

There will be 7,906 bear hunting licenses available for the 2013 hunting seasons.  Bear licenses are available for both residents and nonresidents; however, no more than 2 percent of licenses in any bear management unit will be issued to nonresidents.

Hunters can apply online at www.michigan.gov/huntdrawings, at any authorized license agent or at a DNR Customer Service Center. A nonrefundable $4 fee is charged at the time of application. Hunters may purchase just one application for each species.

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Written by: Janet Rohde
Source: Iron County Reporter
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West Virginia Fall Bear hunting regulations finalized

The Natural Resources Commission convened this week in Morgantown, West Virginia to finalize the fall hunting regulations. The approved package can now go out for printing and distribution to the hundreds of statewide license agents and be published online. Although deer matters usually dominate the quarterly meetings, the burgeoning black bear population got its turn in the barrel.

It’s no wonder with the bruins at all-time highs and hunters breaking kill records of some sort on an annual basis. However, damage complaints are exceeding the dollar amount of “bear damage” stamp license revenue needed to cover them. No coincidence that just like the record numbers of bears, these damage complaints are just following suit.

In testament, West Virginia hunters bagged a record 2,700 bruins just last year. To put that in perspective, the average annual kill for the decade of the 1980s was just shy of 200! That’s more than a tenfold increase in a generation. The growth curve for bears commencing about with the New Millennium looks like a rocket launch.

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Photo & Story by: Bob Fala
Source: Logan Banner
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Michigan Bear Hunting Apps through 6/1

Michigan Black Bear Hunting

“The state’s best bear hunting appears to be in Drummond Island with a 100 percent harvest rate over the last two years.” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

More than 8,000 hunting licenses will be up for grabs this month as the Michigan Department of Natural Resources has set a June 1 deadline for anyone hoping to hunt elk or bear in the fall.

Statewide, there will be 7,906 bear licenses available for 2013 with Eastern Upper Peninsula hunters having their best chance of drawing a tag in the Newberry District which basically encompasses everything east of Munising. There will be 270 licenses sold for the Sept. 10- Oct. 21 hunt and an additional 360 for the Sept. 15- Oct. 26 hunt. The odds of drawing a tag appear to be a little better for those waiting for the Sept. 25- Oct. 26 hunt where 890 licenses will be available.

In 2012, according to DNR figures, those who drew the earliest hunt in the Newberry District enjoyed the highest success rate with 270 hunters registering 120 bears, good for a 44 percent harvest rate. The second hunt produced 128 bruins for 360 hunters delivering for nearly 36 percent of the participants with a sharp decline for those who drew a tag for the final hunt as the 890 permit holders combined for 115 bears for a success rate of around 13 percent.

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Source:  Soo Evening News
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Application for Controlled Idaho Bear Hunts Now Open

ID Bear HJunting

Application for Controlled Idaho Bear Hunts Now Open. [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

JEROME • The application period for this fall’s black bear controlled hunts is open and runs through June 5.

Hunters may apply for controlled hunts at any hunting and fishing license vendor; at an Idaho Department of Fish and Game office; with a credit card by calling 1-800-55HUNT5; or online at http://fishandgame.idaho.gov. An additional fee is charged for telephone and Internet applications.

The 2012 harvest drawing odds for controlled hunts are posted on the Fish and Game website at http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/public/licenses/controlledHunts/lookupOdds.cfm, and in the Idaho Hunt Planner, http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/ifwis/huntPlanner/.

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Source:  Magic Valley powered by Times-News
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TN Bear Hunt Seasons Previewed At April TFWC Meeting

Tennessee Black Bear Hunting

“The April meeting was held at the Paris Convention Center in Henry County. The commission will vote on the 2013-14 seasons at its May 30-31 meeting in Nashville. [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency made its 2013-14 bear hunting seasons recommendations at the April meeting of the Tennessee Fish and Wildlife Commission with few changes to the current regulations.

The April meeting was held at the Paris Convention Center in Henry County. The commission will vote on the 2013-14 seasons at its May 30-31 meeting in Nashville.

TWRA Wildlife and Forestry Division Chief Daryl Ratajczak and members of the division’s staff made presentations to TFWC members.

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Source:  The Chattanoogan
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Hunting ban out of Nevada bear bill

Bear Hunt in Nevada

“A bill that originally banned bear hunting, now calls for a three-year scientific study of bear hunting to be conducted by the Nevada Department of Wildlife.” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

A bill that originally banned bear hunting, now calls for a three-year scientific study of bear hunting to be conducted by the Nevada Department of Wildlife.

Senate Bill 82, by Sen. Mark Manendo, D-Las Vegas, originally declared black bears a protected animal and prohibited the Wildlife Commission from designating a hunting season for them.

Manendo took the senate floor Monday to offer an amendment that he said would delete the bill as a whole. In its place, language would be installed acknowledging the perspectives expressed by both opponents and supporters — from tribal leaders, who say they traditionally revere and protect the bear, to hunters, who want the bear as a trophy species.

He said the new language directs Wildlife to conduct a three-year scientific study of the issue, including whether the bear population will be sustainable if a hunting season is allowed.

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Story by: Geoff Dornan
Source: Tahoe Daily Tribune
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Arkansas G&F commission approves 2013 hunting seasons

LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas — The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission has scheduled the dates for this fall’s deer hunting season.

The commission approved the dates at its monthly meeting Thursday. Modern gun deer season will open Nov. 9, and the end date varies by hunting zone.

Archery season opens Sept. 28 and will run through Feb. 28, 2014, for all zones in the state.

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Source:  SFGate
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North Carolina Bear Hunting and Bear Baiting in Question

It seems like an every other year we have some sort of change or proposal for change in the bear hunting laws and regulations in our state. Here we go again!

I started getting emails from several bear hunters yesterday having to do with their concerns about a proposed change in the bear hunting laws. It appeared that a legislator, at the request of the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commissioners, is introducing a bill that could make it legal to bait a bear in our state.

Hunting Black Bear in North Carolina

It seems like an every other year we have some sort of change or proposal for change in the bear hunting laws and regulations in our state. Here we go again!” [file photo]

According to local hunters, this proposed change is brought about by a request from a bear hunting outfitter (guide service). The change would make it most advantageous for him to charge his bear-hunting clients a profitable fee for a nearly guaranteed, successful trophy bear hunt that would take place over baited sites.

Supposedly, a handful of Hyde County landowners that had been renting their yearly hunting leases to bear hunters who used bear dogs, were being held-up because the landowners had been approached by a certain bear hunting guide service who would pay even more money for the privilege of allowing his clients of still hunters to hunt bear over bait, on his property.

The guide service makes good money and the landowners also make better on their hunting lease sales. All of this hinges on the success (or defeat) of a bill being introduced in the North Carolina Legislature that could give regulatory authority to the Wildlife Commission to make it legal to hunt bear on or over bait.

It is notable that in North Carolina, the legislature has the authority to set up the laws that determine how bears can be hunted in our state. The Wildlife Commission, in turn, is responsible for enforcing those laws. The Wildlife Commission can’t make laws, but it can create regulations that follow (enhance) the laws as set by the legislature.

This proposed bill that Senator Harry Brown (R. Onslow) has introduced would establish an annual Black Bear Stamp (yet another tax?) that would cost N.C. residents $10 a year and non-residents $225.00 a year. Lifetime license holders and license exempt persons (if purchased prior to July 1, 1994) would get the stamp free of charge. The bill (S352) would give the Wildlife Commission the authority to allow the taking of bear by rule.

Many bear hunters welcome the addition of the new, yearly bear stamp particularly having to do with the resident hunters. They feel that requiring the relatively small $10 resident fee would keep many hunters from killing too many bears. Currently, most licensed deer hunters are not required to have any kind of special bear license or tag. The addition of this new tax may stop some hunters from shooting a bear if they stumble on one.

Some of the bear hunting with hound groups are very apprehensive about seeing the NCWRC having this kind of power over setting rules on bear baiting.

Several years ago the laws on bear baiting were changed to allow bait to be used as long as the bait was not processed food, such as peanut butter, chocolate, bubble gum and the well-known bear favorite, honey buns. Bait such as corn, peanuts, sweet potatoes and pears (as long as these were not “processed”) were ok as long as still hunters did not shoot the bear within gunshot of the bait pile. Dog hunters could release their dogs on the trail of a bear at the bait site as long as they did not shoot the bear within gunshot of the bait.

This caused dissension between the still and dog hunters, because one side or the other seemed to feel slighted with this arrangement.

Some hunters draw a distinction between the words “bait” and “feed,” because “bait” refers to the placing of food within a well defined area to draw game into shooting range, whereas the word “feed(ing)” refers to the placing of food scattered in the woods to draw game into a specific, large area that allows dog hunters to better track game animals. If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck then — oh well!

After having bounced around for years on the laws and regulations dealing with hunting bear with dogs, without dogs, over bait, with the aid of bait, type of bait and licensing procedures for bear hunters, it would seem reasonable that somehow our legislators and Wildlife Commissioners could decide on something that would keep our black bear population at a good level and not cause all this squabbling within the ranks of hunters.

Just keep the new regulations that everyone’s talking about simple enough for us to understand and keep our black bear population at a sustainable level.

I don’t know of any one sporting group of hunters that are more concerned with the conservation of the resource that they represent than the bear hunters themselves. Be they dog or still bear hunters, they work for a common goal and depend on our elected legislators and their appointed Wildlife Commissioners to see to it that our wildlife managers conserve our resources to be of the best possible use to us citizens. If they don’t properly do their jobs in the eyes of the outdoorsmen who pay their salaries, then outdoorsmen still have voting power to see to it that we elect someone else who can.

While some consider it unsportsmanlike to shoot a bear over bait, others do not feel that way. States such as Maine have a very good population of bears, and through strictly regulated management of this type of bear hunting their bear population seems to be thriving. Some Canadian Provinces likewise allow baiting without seeming to harm the bear populations.

Other states, such as our sister state, Virginia, forbid the feeding (baiting) of bear at any time and the feeding of deer from the first of September through the end of January of the following year. From my experience these rules are nearly a joke. Wal-Marts, Tractor Supplies and feed stores do a booming business selling what’s plainly labeled “Deer Corn” all year long in that state.

If our wildlife managers have conducted extensive studies that have determined that allowing the baiting and hunting of bears is detrimental to their sustainable population levels, then North Carolina should not allow baiting.

Let’s face it, the first responsibility of our wildlife managers is to the resource and, secondly, to our hunters. Some hunters have recently accused our new NC Wildlife Commissioners of catering to “their rich hunting buddies” and if this is the case and the faction of the bear hunters could be harmful to the sustainable population bears, then these guys have a legitimate complaint.

Some think that if the high-dollar outfitter (guiding service) gains control of certain large tracts of land down east that they will be literally “selling wild game animals” when they virtually guarantee their clients that they will kill a trophy bear when they sign on for one of their very expensive hunts. On the other hand is there any difference in this and the swan hunts that also virtually guarantee that their clients will take a swan?

Even the anti-hunting faction here in our state has some “say-so” in the way our wildlife resources are managed and they do not want to see any black bears hunted for sport. They do not realize that without any natural predator (other than man) to control the population of bears here, the results would not be pretty.

Our black bears have adapted beautifully to the ways of modern man. Even hunting can’t keep the bear population low enough to keep the bear from overpopulating to the extent that they’re not only a nuisance to farmers but a mild danger to man as well. Since farmers are allowed to prevent bear damage to crops and property by any method, they routinely shoot and kill bears that are in their fields damaging crops. No license or permit is needed by the landowner or farmer to do this. It’s a shame to see these animals killed and left to rot in the fields.

North Carolina presently has what is probably has the most dense population in the entire world of huge black bears. Hunters from all over the world come here to hunt them and, for the most part, our native hunters are happy with the situation. We’d like to keep it that way and not let the hunters with the most dollars turn our bear resources into a free-for-all for the rich.

Story by:  Fred Bonner
Source:  Cleveland Post
The Bear Hunting Blog

Bear Hunters’ Guide to Maryland Black Bear Hunting

Maryland Bear Hunting

Maryland Black bear hunter, Derek Smith, with a nice MD Bruin.

Explanation of the Maryland Bear Hunting Preference Point System

In 2007, DNR implemented a Preference Point System for bear hunting permit applicants. Each year that a hunter applies for a bear hunting permit he/she will receive one preference point if they are not selected for a bear hunting permit. The preference points will provide additional entries in future lotteries. Applicants will get one additional entry in the lottery for each year they are a concurrent applicant. The Preference Point System has been functioning as it was designed. Preference points have improved applicants’ chances of getting drawn in the lottery. In 2011, 87% of the successful applicants drawn in the lottery had at least one preference point.

  • Applicants must apply each year to retain preference points. If an applicant skips a year, all preference points will be forfeited.
  • Once an applicant is selected to receive a bear hunting permit, all preference points will be forfeited.
  • If an applicant is selected in the lottery, but forfeits the permit, all preference points will be forfeited.
  • Applicants will not forfeit preference points by participating in the hunt as a Sub-permittee or Landowner Sub-permittee.
  • Applicants have the opportunity to purchase a preference point only. This will allow those hunters who cannot hunt in 2012 the opportunity to retain their preference points for use in future drawings without risk of losing them.

New this Year

Residents of the hunt area (Garrett and Allegany counties) will receive preference in the lottery drawing. The first 25% of applications drawn will be reserved for residents of the hunt area. The remaining 75% of applications selected will be drawn from the remaining pool of all eligible applicants. This change is in response to continuous requests from the public since bear hunting has returned to western Maryland in 2004. This is an attempt to help residents experiencing nuisance bear problems address those issues directly through applied hunting pressure.

Source: Maryland Department of Natural Resources

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