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Campfire Greenhorn
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Campfire Greenhorn
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Fellas , I will be hunting bear in Colorado this coming fall, being a Louisiana boy i realy don't know a whole lot about bear hunting but am wandering is there an effective way to lure bears with any thing other than a bait pile? I plan on hunting any guy piles i can locate but are any of the scents that are sold legal and effective.The scents I am referring to are anise oil or some other strong scent that can not be eaten
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Joined: Mar 2010
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
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No scents are needed.get a good set of glass. Plan on hiking a lot. Get up early and glass and glass in the evenings. Look for local fall food sources.
Planning on hunting gut piles is not a good plan. Pretty simple
Call the bio in the unit you plan to hunt. Practice shooting out to 400 yards before you go. Know how to skin out bear before you shoot
Get into good hiking shape
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Campfire Regular
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Marshmallows dipped in bacon grease.
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Campfire Tracker
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Campfire Tracker
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I’ve called them in with fawn distress calls. Rabbit too
"For some unfortunates, poisoned by city sidewalks ... the horn of the hunter never winds at all" Robert Ruark, The Horn of the Hunter
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Joined: Jan 2009
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Campfire Regular
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Campfire Regular
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I’ve called them in with fawn distress calls. Rabbit too Would you be willing to share more on that? As far as your set up, sequence ect. I’m really looking to get into calling black bears.
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Joined: Dec 2003
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Campfire Oracle
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Campfire Oracle
Joined: Dec 2003
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Fellas , I will be hunting bear in Colorado this coming fall, being a Louisiana boy i realy don't know a whole lot about bear hunting but am wandering is there an effective way to lure bears with any thing other than a bait pile? I plan on hunting any guy piles i can locate but are any of the scents that are sold legal and effective.The scents I am referring to are anise oil or some other strong scent that can not be eaten As always, check the regs. Using scent is usually considered the same as actually actual baits.
If you take the time it takes, it takes less time. --Pat Parelli
American by birth; Alaskan by choice. --ironbender
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Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 95
Campfire Greenhorn
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OP
Campfire Greenhorn
Joined: Aug 2012
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Why exactly is setting a gut pile a bad idea? Not to be offensive I'm just trying to understand I am wandering what I am missing . I know nearly every head of big game I have killed in the past , the un edible parts where eaten buy bears in a couple days. I'm ok with the glassing strategy in the morning but it is hard to see further than a couple hundred yards (in the openings) due to the thickness of the woods. Oh the area I typically hint is unit 77
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I killed an elk during a warm dry weather stretch in Colorado a few years ago...
I had a bear on the gut pile before I got all the quarters hung in the shade.... small brown colored bear... I had to shew him off the caracas so I could finish.
If you are gonna hunt gut piles... best be there when fresh. They will be gone within 48 hours.
Well... we have come to the point.... where... the parasites are killing the host. It's only a matter of time now.
They only win.... when they cheat.
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Joined: Apr 2010
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Campfire Outfitter
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Campfire Outfitter
Joined: Apr 2010
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Sitting a gut pile isn’t the best plan unless the bear density is very high simply because you’re counting on one being close enough to find it in a short amount of time. You’ll have much better success finding an area where you can glass hillsides and see a lot of country. Get one located and make a stalk to intercept him.
Edit to add. My family has been hunting an adjacent unit to the area you plan to hunt since 1955. In that time we’ve had one bear get on a carcass and have killed 3 or 4 bears while hunting deer and elk. I’ve seen elk gut piles sit untouched for a week. Maybe next door where you plan to go there are better numbers of bears or maybe they’re mostly denned up when we go but it wouldn’t be my first choice for a place to just bear hunt.
Last edited by TheKid; 03/05/21.
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Joined: Aug 2012
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Campfire Greenhorn
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Campfire Greenhorn
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I guess it is pretty high density . A couple years ago a friend an I both killed elk on opening day , not having anything better to do the next evening we sat on his gut pile at a range of about 150yds and we saw 3 bears at the same time with only the largest one actually eating before dark. This was in muzzle loader season.
Last edited by leadfeather; 03/05/21.
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Joined: Dec 2008
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 21,199 |
No scents are needed.get a good set of glass. Plan on hiking a lot. Get up early and glass and glass in the evenings. Look for local fall food sources.
Planning on hunting gut piles is not a good plan. Pretty simple
Call the bio in the unit you plan to hunt. Practice shooting out to 400 yards before you go. Know how to skin out bear before you shoot
Get into good hiking shape
Yep figure out the groceries they’re hittin, they get it pretty good pre hibernation
Ping pong balls for the win. Once you've wrestled everything else in life is easy. Dan Gable I keep my circle small, I’d rather have 4 quarters than 100 pennies.
Ain’t easy havin pals.
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Campfire Outfitter
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Campfire Outfitter
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Depending on area, ponds can be effective. Sounds like you need a cow elk tag and the elk hunt would become a bear hunt pretty quick. Shoot em all, we have too many.
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Campfire Outfitter
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Campfire Outfitter
Joined: Jan 2001
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Carry a bunch of black licorice in an open container. Stinks to high heaven.....and you can eat it! To my knowledge, it’s not illegal to carry snacks, trail mix, or sandwiches while hunting......well, it may be In Kolorado! 😉memtb
Last edited by memtb; 03/05/21.
You should not use a rifle that will kill an animal when everything goes right; you should use one that will do the job when everything goes wrong." -Bob Hagel
“I’d like to be a good rifleman…..but, I prefer to be a good hunter”! memtb 2024
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Campfire Tracker
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Campfire Tracker
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I’ve called them in with fawn distress calls. Rabbit too Would you be willing to share more on that? As far as your set up, sequence ect. I’m really looking to get into calling black bears. So I’ve had no luck with blind sets, but my buddy who taught me has. When glassing an oak hillside with bears they can be very hard to actually approach. So on a few occasions we’ve called them out of cover and into our sets. Obviously wind matters here, but it’s all basic coyote calling stuff. When you get their attention they will come in steadily. I’ve not seen the charge that others describe. As for the sequence, never really did much for breaks, just set the shooter up 50 to 100 yards ahead of the caller. No decoys or anything. Pretty steady desperation calling.
Last edited by exbiologist; 03/05/21.
"For some unfortunates, poisoned by city sidewalks ... the horn of the hunter never winds at all" Robert Ruark, The Horn of the Hunter
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Campfire Regular
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My friend and I hunted black bears for the 1st time on Kupreanoff Island in 2009. My buddy watch a video where distress calls were used to call in bears so he had one in his pocket. We spotted a bear across an inlet and stalked it for an hour or 2. The bear finally disappeared into the trees but sure enough he called it back with the rabbit call and shot it a short while later.
"Socialism produces bad music, bad art, social stagnation and really unhappy people", “I am a conservative, and you may not like that, but I am.” Frank Zappa 1986
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Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 46
Campfire Greenhorn
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Campfire Greenhorn
Joined: Jun 2009
Posts: 46 |
I’ve called them in with fawn distress calls. Rabbit too Would you be willing to share more on that? As far as your set up, sequence ect. I’m really looking to get into calling black bears. So I’ve had no luck with blind sets, but my buddy who taught me has. When glassing an oak hillside with bears they can be very hard to actually approach. So on a few occasions we’ve called them out of cover and into our sets. Obviously wind matters here, but it’s all basic coyote calling stuff. When you get their attention they will come in steadily. I’ve not seen the charge that others describe. As for the sequence, never really did much for breaks, just set the shooter up 50 to 100 yards ahead of the caller. No decoys or anything. Pretty steady desperation calling. If you search through some Mark Dombrenski's old posts he talks about calling them in the Spring and had some good ideas, and said much the same as Exi. He would spot them first to make sure they weren't a sow with cubs and would then start calling to get them out in the open. I have yet to try it but he did mention that they would lose attention quicker than coyotes so you'd have to keep calling the whole time without much pause, but obviously ymmv
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