2025 spring bear thread

Oregon Coast Range Bear.

I was slinking along this evening through a meadowy area and along came this guy grazing along about 50 yards away. I immediately thought he was a big boar but only got to see him for a short while before he went behind some brush. He was out of sight before I was 100% sure I wanted to shoot so I just waited. About a minute later he came back out and was quartering towards me on the same trail I was on. When he got to about 35 yards I decided I better get busy! I hit him solid on the point of his shoulder and he spun around once and piled up 29 yards from me. Big old greasy bear!

I’ve been super busy and didn’t get to hunt nearly as much as I wanted but feel very fortunate I saw good bears both times I got out.

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On the drive down I listened to every podcast I could find related to my hunt: spot and stalk bear, spring bear, hibernation, the “green wave”, spring forbs, MT spring bear, even SW MT spring bear. The amount of easily accessible information out there is just wild, some of which is even good information 😄

More tactical adjustments to be made. I think I need to account more for security cover. Where I am hunting there is plenty of fresh green-up in sparse timber and small openings at this time of year. Last time I was concentrating probably too much on edges of parks and meadows in the second week of June. I suspect there were quite a few bears right where I was hunting, but I spent little time looking at the best terrain features of the area, and I overlooked the animals.

Higher vantage points for glassing, and glass the best landscape features that have everything a bear needs this time of year. I am confident that in six days I can pick up a sow, and with a little luck and patience, a cruising boar who visits with her long enough for me to put a stalk on.

I also brought a couple of distress calls. Mostly to stop a bear, or get it to move back in the open. I’ve debated blind calling, but I’d need to first scramble up a boulder or a tree where I am confident a GB cannot reach me.

The biggest wildcard is other hunters. A busy trailhead and I will want to move to ensure I am not hunting on top of anyone.
 
Oregon Coast Range Bear.

I was slinking along this evening through a meadowy area and along came this guy grazing along about 50 yards away. I immediately thought he was a big boar but only got to see him for a short while before he went behind some brush. He was out of sight before I was 100% sure I wanted to shoot so I just waited. About a minute later he came back out and was quartering towards me on the same trail I was on. When he got to about 35 yards I decided I better get busy! I hit him solid on the point of his shoulder and he spun around once and piled up 29 yards from me. Big old greasy bear!

I’ve been super busy and didn’t get to hunt nearly as much as I wanted but feel very fortunate I saw good bears both times I got out.

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Congrats Joe, That's a good looking bear :)
 
I see making a boar/sow call is basically a damn coin toss for these Wyoming hunters. I spent about $400 for the bear tag/conservation license and it looks like I’m not going get a day in before the sow killers shut it down for the spring. I predict Memorial Day is a great day to kill sows for the cowboys.
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Can some g&F agencies consider a 5 year wait on bear license if a hunter kills a sow?
I think the majority of my bears have been boars but I have always been an equal opportunity bear killer. Of course, I have always hunted in areas without a sow quota, and mostly in areas where the wildlife managers have wanted to reduce the bear population (liberal seasons/two bear limit/reduced price NR tags/etc).

And, as far as telling a boar from a sow, I do well telling a bigger bear from a little bear. 😀
 

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