Originally Posted by Okanagan
Originally Posted by Osky
Bears here in northern central Minnesota respond to calls in the fall during season. The only issue is even tho I am very off grid remote, they are incredibly wary. They will not cross any sort of opening/clear cut if they can get around it.
I have called from raised stands and during our early fall season with leaves and underbrush still thick they get in awfully close before detection. They disappear even faster.

I have found it too difficult to make an age/size determination in this country with such a short time for the shot. Don’t do it here any more. Fawn bleats.

Osky



Found the same problem with calling bears: if a bear coming to the call is in brush, it is often hard to tell how big it is. I have called some in open enough country to get a good look however. I prefer to call inside of fairly open forest for almost any kind of critter rather than try to call them out of cover into the open.

Calling bears works but to work well it takes some thinking before the first call sound. My grandsons called several this Fall. On his first bear one grandson killed an average adult at 58 yards that they did not get a good look at till it was dead. Other grandsons combined spot and stalk with a predator call to get a stalked bear to position himself better for a shot or get him to step into a more open spot.

I like to use a call along with spot and stalk, but for spotting we have open alpine berry patches up high and clear cuts at low elevation. If a hunter wants a big bear, it would be good to locate some big bear sign and target that specific bear rather than call cold or in general bear sign.



Ok... about 8 years ago I had father son up here bear hunting. Dad wanted to sit with his son who was 30 something but had never shot big game. We ended up all three up in a stand me filming. Nothing was happening so I hit the call in my pocket. As a fluke I looked in the right direction and saw brush top movement and knew it was a bear. I quieted down, worked the call, and happened to look down to see a second bear at the base of our tree looking up at me. Neither were big.
I split the two next evening and the son took a beautiful 6.5 footer from that stand, meanwhile the father far away was impatient at his stand and left just before shooting time ended. Camera showed a terrific bear better than 500lbs strolled in 6 minutes after the guy left. Missed out on a beauty.
Our clearings up here are generally logging clear cuts. Bears like those in spring for grass and bugs but come fall they won’t cross them in daylight if given a choice. They stick to thick brush. I have a rule here of no bears may be shot if under 300lbs. Just can’t stick to that here with a calling method.

Osky


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