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.

Read the rest of the story by clicking here!

Photo & Story by: Bob Fala
Source: Logan Banner
For more information on West Virginia Bear Hunting, click the active link.
Bear Hunting Blog

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.

Click here to read the rest of the story!

Source:  Soo Evening News
For more information on Bear Hunting in Michigan, click the active link.
Bear Hunting Blog

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.

Click here to read the rest of the story!

Source:  SFGate
For additional information on Arkansas Bear Hunting, click the active link!
The Bear Hunting Blog

2013 Pennsylvania Bear Hunting Season & Limits set

Pennsylvania Black Bear Hunting

“The Board of Pennsylvania Game Commissioners yesterday adopted black bear seasons, bag limits and allocations for the 2013 license year, which begins July 1.” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

HARRISBURG, Pa., The Board of Pennsylvania Game Commissioners yesterday adopted black bear seasons, bag limits and allocations for the 2013 license year, which begins July 1. The board also finalized the inclusion of Wildlife Management Unit 2H during its quarterly meeting.

Hunters and trappers — particularly those setting vacations for this fall and winter — also are advised that several seasons will open or run about a week later in the 2013-14 license year to accommodate calendar swings — related to the timing of Thanksgiving — that occur about every seven years.

A listing of most 2013-2014 seasons and daily bag limits is as follows:

BLACK BEAR (Statewide) Archery: Nov. 18-22. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (Statewide): Nov. 23-27. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 4C, 4D and 4E): Dec. 4-7. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 2B, 5B, 5C and 5D): Dec. 2-14. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 3A, 3B, 3C and 3D): Dec. 2-7. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 2B, 5C and 5D) Archery: Sept. 21-Nov. 16. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 5B) Archery: Oct. 5-Nov. 16. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 2B, 5B, 5C and 5D) Muzzleloader: Oct. 19-26. Only 1 bear may be taken during the license year.

BLACK BEAR (WMUs 2B, 5B, 5C and 5D) Special Firearms: Oct. 24-26, for junior and senior license holders, disabled hunters with a permit to use a vehicle as a blind and resident active duty military.

Source:  Pennsylvania Game Commission
For additional information on Bear Hunting in Pennsylvania, Click the active link.
Bear Hunting Blog

Washington Black Bear Hunting Season starts today

Washington bear hunting

“Most spring bear limited-entry hunts in southeast and western Washington areas start Monday, April 15.” [file photo]

Already underway are spring black bear permit-only pursuits in six Northeast Washington areas. Most spring bear limited-entry hunts in southeast and western Washington areas start Monday, April 15.

Reports from the east side say a moderate snow pack is melting away nicely, so hunters who get permission from private landowners for access should find fair to good hunting at lower elevations at season’s start.

SPRING BRUIN HUNTERS START

Instituted to accomplish several management objectives rather than providing a general hunt opportunity, these are early-year, controlled access black bear opportunities (with a defined number of participants), for which each hunter must have a special permit awarded by lottery.

Open for either 46 or 61 days, depending on the hunt area, are:

  • Six game management units are in the northeast part of the state.
  • Nine GMUs are in the Blue Mountains (southeast Region 1), and
  • Five composite (specially designed) black bear hunt areas in Western Washington.

Specific start and end dates for each area can be found on page 63 of the 2012-13 hunting regulations pamphlet.

The west-of-the-Cascades black bear hunt area menu consists of two zones in North Puget Sound (Region 4), one on the coast north of Grays Harbor (Region 6), one on the northwest side of Mount Rainier (outside the park) and one on the south side of the Capitol Forest, west of Centralia.

A key goal of the Region 1 spring bear opportunities is to equalize gender proportions in the annual black bear harvest in those management areas. However, in Western Washington, vernal hunts target black bears in places where a number of animals are damaging young conifer trees growing on state and private timberlands.

Permit levels by area range from four issued for the Couse hunt in Southeast Washington to 150 allotted for the westside’s Kapowsin hunt.

By rule in Washington, a hunter may kill two black bear in a license year (April 1 to March 31), and the one bruin allowed in the spring on a special permit counts toward this yearly limit.

Besides this main bag limit rule, hunters are limited to taking just one animal per year from Eastern Washington.

All five westside hunt areas lie predominantly on private timber holdings, and those companies generally restrict public access to their property.

Hancock Forest Management (for the Kapowsin Tree Farm) and Rayonier (for corporate lands in the Copalis hunt area) require black bear hunters to purchase access permits to enter their lands, while several other companies make specific arrangements for hunters to gain access to their holdings through locked gates.

Except for the limited-entry characteristic, spring hunts for black bear are governed by much the same rules as the fall general seasons.

Besides the special 2013 spring bear hunt permit, participants must have a valid basic 2013 Washington hunting license listing black bear as an option as well as a valid 2013 black bear transport tag.

As with the fall general bruin season, any lawful hunting weapon (modern handgun/rifle/shotgun, bow and arrow or blackpowder firearm) may be used.

However, hunting with bait and using dogs to pursue and tree black bear are both forbidden.

Spring bear hunters succeeding in their quest also must submit a pre-molar tooth and must file, whether successful or not, an annual report of all their black bear hunting activity.

Though it does not carry the force of regulation, black bear hunters, as an ethical consideration, are asked to not kill black bear sows that have cubs in tow. To guard against this they’re urged to hold their fire until they confirm that their intended quarry does not have a small cub or cubs scuttling along behind them.

In Northeast Washington, especially in the Selkirk Mountains with their confirmed remnant population, there is also the proviso that bruin hunters positively identify that their intended target is a black bear not a grizzly bear. Experts warn that color and size alone are not foolproof keys to identification.

Profiles showing all the characteristics distinguishing black from grizzly bears are available for review in Washington’s hunting regulations pamphlet, and several western states including Washington now have online study and ID tests that will further hone identification skills and accuracy.

Washington grizzlies are designated as endangered under both Washington state and federal laws and both carry stiff potential penalties for even mistakenly killing them.

Source:  The News Tribune
Washington Bear Hunting InfoWashington Department of Fish and Wildlife
The Bear Hunting Blog

 

Montana Bear Hunters prepare for Season

Bear Hunting in Montana

“Montana Bear Hunters prepare for Season opener tomorrow” [file photo]

To hear some speak of a spring bear hunt, there is a tone of both respect and revelry.

“Bears can be dangerous. I’ve been charged by a sow with a cub, and mostly, all they’re trying to do is scare you,” said Gerry Mercer, a taxidermist and local sportsman who took a bear last season. “ I’ve learned you’ve got to respect bears. Hunting black bears and grizzly bears is quite a bit different. They’ve got different temperaments. While a black bear will try to scare you, brown bears and grizzlies will come right at you and put the hurt on you.”

Mercer has hunted grizzlies in Alaska.

In Montana, Mercer spoke with excitement and a sense of ease in a spring bear hunt.

“Grasses are coming up. The trees come to life and animals begin to move again,” Mercer said. “They get out there, and they’ll eat just about anything. They’re a garbage machine. I’ve seen them eating decaying carcasses with maggots, maggots and all. They’re disgusting.”

Then the veteran black bear hunter offered some tips.

“I look for bear (scat). They may visit an area and return there for awhile,” Mercer said offering a bear-hunting hint, surrounded by beautiful bear mounts and rugs, full-body mounts of mountain lions, mountain goats and a collection of deer and elk mounts. “Springtime — It’s a great time to be in the woods. Spring bear hunting is a major deal for me.”

Black bears make terrific trophies and not everyone will eat the meat, but Mercer recommends for those who do like to make sausages, as he does, to get the meat tested for trichinella, a parasite that can be harmful if infected meat is not cooked thoroughly.

“For any older bear, I’d have it tested,” Mercer said. “If you cook the meat well enough, it’s OK. I’d only make smokeys (sausages) out of bear meat.”

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will test the meat free. Hunters should send one-third of the tongue or equally sized muscle tissue to FWP Wildlife Research Lab, Box 173220, Bozeman, Mont., 59717-3220. A mail-in kit may be requested from any FWP regional or area office.

Montana Bear Hunting

Montana Black Bear Identification test

All first-time black bear hunters must complete and pass an online black bear identification class, and proof of successful completion of that class is required before hunters may purchase their license. The test is required so hunters do not accidentally shoot a grizzly. In 2012, a hunter near the Montana-Idaho border accidentally shot a grizzly bear, followed it into the brush and, ultimately, had a close-contact encounter with the grizzly that led to the mauling and accidental shooting of his hunting partner.

The season begins Monday, April 15, and ends on May 31 in immediate areas within Bear Management Units 100, 102, 103 and 104, which includes most of Lincoln County. Hunting may begin one-half hour before sunrise and sessions must end one-half hour after sunset. Rifle hunters are required to wear blaze orange of at least 400 square inches.

Also, no electronic or recorded game calls may be used.

Montana residents pay $19 for a black bear tag while non-residents must pay $350.

While Mercer has vast black-bear experience, Cerria Swagger plans to get her first black bear tag in 2013.

“No, I’m not too concerned,” said Swagger who has hunted black bear previously with her father, Bill. However, this will be the first time she has her own tag.

“My dad will go with me, so I really don’t have any concerns,” she said. “I’ve learned in our science and social science classes that people are at the top of the food chain.”

Swagger’s father said he’s happy to see his daughter getting her own tag.

“A bear’s best senses are its sight and smell, and we’ll make sure we have bear spray,” Bill Swagger said. “That has a way of taking a bear from fight to flight.”

Fish, Wildlife & Parks Bear biologist Kim Annis said no bear hunter should take to the forests without a current and tested bear spray.

“People are hunting black bears in grizzly bear country, and the first defense should be bear spray,” Annis said.

Annis explained a quality bear spray will create a space between the bear and the hunter and has the potential to stop a bear in its tracks, while that may not always be the case if the first choice of protection is a weapon.

“Bear spray will create a wall. It’s not a perfect solution but it could be the best solution to give the user a chance to back up and get away,” she said.

Annis was clear. While a weapon can, with one well-placed shot, drop a bear, it difficult to execute that shot when in a hurry.

“It’s incredibly difficult to get that kind of shot. And if a bear’s wounded, it can change and become more dangerous,” she said.

Source:  The Western News
Montana Bear Hunting Info: Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks
The Bear Hunting Blog

Montana Black bear numbers growing in Southeast part of the State.

Black bear numbers have climbed over the past seven years in southeastern Montana, prompting the Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission to recently double the harvest quota this fall from four to eight bears.

The season in FWP’s Region 7 started in 2006 in response to increased bear sightings and sportsmen interest.

During the 2012 Region 7 black bear hunting seasons, region wide either-sex quotas of two and four were in place for the spring and fall. Five black bears were shot; one in the spring and four in the fall. Three were males and two were females.

This marked the third consecutive year and the fourth time in seven years that the fall quota was met. Fifty-five percent of Region 7 black bear harvests were by hunters targeting some other species. The spring quota has never been met.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Source: Billings Gazette
For more information on Bear Hunting in Montana, click the active link – Bear Hunting Blog

Montana Black Bear Hunting Season Opens April 5th

Montana Bear Hunting

Montana Black Bear Hunting Spring Season Opens April 5th

HELENA – Montana’s black bear hunting spring season opens April 15, with state wildlife officials reminding hunters that they must purchase their licenses on or before April 14.

Hunters who buy licenses after April 14 must wait 24 hours before hunting a black bear, and hunters are limited to one black bear license a year.

All are reminded that they must successfully complete Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks’ bear identification test before purchasing a black bear license.

Hunters who have already passed the bear identification test do not need to retake it, but FWP encourages black bear hunters to continuously hone their ability to distinguish a black bear from a grizzly.

Click the active link to take the bear identification test, Complete the training and test, and then present the printed on-line certificate to purchase a license. The training and test are also available on paper, with a mail-in answer card, at FWP regional offices.

The 2013 Montana black bear hunting regulations are available online.

Source: 8KPAX.com
The Bear Hunting Blog

 

Georgia Black Bear hunting proposed rules shift

Georgia Black Bear Hunting

“Georgia wildlife managers would move the Middle Georgia black bear hunting season from November to December under proposed hunting rules for the next two years.” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

Georgia wildlife managers would move the Middle Georgia black bear hunting season from November to December under proposed hunting rules for the next two years.

The open hunt would happen the second Saturday in December. In other respects, the controversial bear hunt would remain the same: an open season on private land in Houston, Twiggs and Bibb counties.

The first open season on the Middle Georgia black bear population was held two years ago, with an estimated 10 percent of the population being killed, almost all near Tarversville in TwiggsCounty. Half of the 34 bears killed were female. In 2012, with game managers aggressively enforcing hunting regulations, 14 bears were harvested. Both years, multiple bears were killed illegally, and 52 percent of those harvested were female.

Read the rest of the article by clicking here!

Source: The Telegraph and S. HEATHER DUNCAN
Bear Hunting Blog