- Joined
- Mar 13, 2020
- Messages
- 7,532
- Reaction score
- 21,155
- Location
- On the Border in Idaho looking at BC
make it a tall skinny oneI'll let you know once I get down from this tree!
make it a tall skinny oneI'll let you know once I get down from this tree!
Griz has been known to take the tree down.I'll let you know once I get down from this tree!
Just the other day I read an article about a bowhunter in Montana or maybe Wyoming who was attacked by a griz. He shot it several times with a 10 and then got a shot to the head that killed the bear. He got chewed up pretty bad.I don't want to be that close enough to spray the monster! Would have a 10mm on my belt if going there!
And the key and fleet feet.If I remember right, sometimes back in the 70's or 80's somewhere in Oregon or Washington a greenie had himself chained to a tree to protest logging. Along came a black bear and ate him for breakfast. I'll bet he wished he'd had a pistol, a big one.
No, different case. It was in the local paper a few days ago. There were three bowhunters each about 300 yards from each other. The guy in the middle had a griz walk by about 20 yards away. When the griz smelled him it immediately attacked him and started biting him on the thigh. He was screaming and shooting. He did get a shot into it's head and killed it. His two companions heard him screaming and shooting and rushed to his aid but by the time they got there the bear was dead.On Longcruise's comment, I might have read the same article, except I remember two men were bow hunting for elk and one was attacked by a grizzly. Between the two of them they put over 20 pistol rounds in the bear to subdue it. One was fighting the bear and the other was trying to not shoot his buddy while saving him. Don't think a trade gun would cut it.
A running bear. Let alone a grizzly will plow into you if you wait to long do momentum. My cousin wounded a back bear years ago, and got help to track it down. I put 5 44 mag rounds into it at that distance when it charged me. All rounds hit, and it landed at my feet.Random thought..
If you were out there. You know grizzly wants to eat you.
Is running at you. You have One shot.
Do you take the 20 yard or so shot when you see the bear coming
Or
Hold it. Holding Hold it till that thing is the length of the gun away or closer.. like your going to powder burn that thing.
Could you Hold it.
I read that the expedition shot a bear but didn't kill it making the men jump off a cliff into the water to get away from the bear that was on a rampage? I can't recall where I read this?I just remember how Merriwether Lewis’s first account of a grizzly bear was his description of killing one and saying that it was no wonder the Indians were afraid ‘armed, as they are, with bows or indifferent fusils… but a competent rifleman has nothing to fear…” And how his second account came after they wounded one that chased him for a mile and had to be shot repeatedly- “I had rather fight two Indians than one grizzly bear.”
Jay
Greenies don't like 'guns', either!If I remember right, sometimes back in the 70's or 80's somewhere in Oregon or Washington a greenie had himself chained to a tree to protest logging. Along came a black bear and ate him for breakfast. I'll bet he wished he'd had a pistol, a big one.
we need to consider the fact that 24/7/365 wild critters are faced with staying alive in conditions that would eventually kill most of us. anywhere there are multiple predators, the predators are tough and hard to disable let alone kill. At the same time the prey species toughen up from the pressure.In Penicaut's diary
https://www.amazon.com/Calumet-Penicaut-Narrative-Adventure-Louisiana/dp/B000I2XVOW#:~:text=Fleur de Lys and Calumet; being
There is an excellent story of Penicaut and a friend shooting a bear with trade guns, first in the face with shot and as things progress with ball. If I remember correctly this took place around where Grand Tower Illinois is now.
Bears are tough apparently.
Enter your email address to join: