Coastal Black Bears- Why do you go? Why Don't you go?

Ballistic

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Valparaiso, In.
I've become extremely interested in other adventures with some of the most common ones enduring intense pressure in recent years. Given the lengths one has to go for caribou or Moose hunting, I'm looking at Bears and deer around prince William sound. If you hunt coastal bears what do you like? What don't you like? If you don't go why? Is there a barrier to entry I didn't think of or just generic lack of interest?
 
It’s honestly too easy. Not much of a true hunt involved. If you’re fat, okay it might be a hunt for you but it’s really like catching fish in a barrel.
Oh, and they also don’t taste very good. Not as bad as a coastal Fall bear, but they still have residual salmon taste.
 
Be aware that Spring hunts are on a draw basis. Fall hunts are OTC, but most consider salmon eating bears to be inedible.
 
It’s honestly too easy. Not much of a true hunt involved. If you’re fat, okay it might be a hunt for you but it’s really like catching fish in a barrel.
Oh, and they also don’t taste very good. Not as bad as a coastal Fall bear, but they still have residual salmon taste.
I am fat, at least of varying grades depending on what I'm hunting that year. This year I'm "Sheep" fat. I was not aware of meat issues in spring, and was shocked at how great my spring SK. bear tasted changing forever my interest in hunting them.

Be aware that Spring hunts are on a draw basis. Fall hunts are OTC, but most consider salmon eating bears to be inedible.
I don't see that.. 6D is a registration hunt, I don't know what all that entails. Some research indicates limited permits that can run out, some shows season closure after harvest quota is met.
 
Guide and cost: Biggest Brown Bear barrier to me. I would do it as an add on to a moose hunt. But that's about it. Black bear would be fun and the seasons are long. We have discussed going after them a couple times. The limiting factors for black bear being: Time. Would take away from other hunts. And what to do after you shoot one. We have all harvested them and have skulls, mounts and rugs. So really not sure other then the adventure if any of us really want another one. I will shoot one while hunting other species though. It will have to be big.
 
Went on a really great southeast Alaska packraft black bear hunt last year, as a resident. Ponied up the $, flew out with a great pilot, packrafted all around the most game rich island I’ve ever been on, up and down a tidal channel that is a hydraulic miracle. Saw moose and deer constantly, missed a shot opportunity on a mega bear, and came home with a 6.5 foot beauty at the end of the day. My friend got a similar bear as well.

Do I regret it? Maybe a little… having already spent several weeks on backcountry trips in SEAK, it wasn’t really anything new, just a new location and a new goal. The meat is a little funky, all I can do is make stew out of it to get the taste out. The hunt was not super challenging, but took some perseverance to find a nice one.

Would I do it again? Yes, big time, with a caveat… no I wouldn’t hunt black bears (actively). Instead, next time I go down there in the spring it is going to be with the usual goal of catching steelhead in creeks and rivers. Using the packraft to explore would be ultimate. Sleeping in a tent with the bears doesn’t really bother me, so I would love to check out some rivers that others stay away from due to access/no FS cabin. I would probably take some sort of rifle or something to leave in the boat in case a very large bear is just asking to get shot.

No regrets, but I could’ve spent that week off and that money flying in for a second mountain goat hunt this fall… which I really would’ve rather done.
 
Only reason I've never been is it's a really long ways from my house to shoot an animal that lives in my state as well. I've also never hunted whitetails outside my state.
 
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