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TRACKING WOUNDED BIG GAME: Those of us in Deer Search
have tracked a number of bears with our wirehaired dachshunds. Even those
dachshunds that have never tracked anything but wounded deer start off
willingly on a wounded bear line. I have to admit that the dogs give us some
funny looks at the beginning. They seem to sense that a bear is something big
and nasty even if they have never seen one. They show some caution at first.
When they warm to the task, they forget about being worried. When the bear is
jumped alive, they are raring to go on the hot line. Bears often leave a poor
blood trail for the eye tracker. The fat of the bear tends to close the arrow
or bullet wound, and the heavy coat absorbs much of the blood. In the more
difficult cases much of the blood that the unassisted hunter sees will be
smeared on saplings and branches rather than dripped on the ground. Bears can be hard to track
by eye, but they are easy for a dog because the body and pad scent of the bear
is overwhelmingly strong. I was called upon to track a bear that had been
wounded with a 30-06 rifle 48 hours earlier. When I saw the evidence, I
strongly suspected a grazing high leg or shoulder hit that had not broken bone.
We tracked over a half mile of visible blood trail and through a deadfall area
where the hunter had stopped tracking. My dachshund Sabina was able to continue
on with little difficulty for over three miles of typical Catskill mountain
terrain forested with hardwoods and hemlocks. A few, widely scattered smears of
blood on saplings indicated that we were on the right track. The bear just kept
going. We never caught up to him. The probabilities are very high that this
bear survived. I hope to see a bear killed
cleanly, but when a bear is wounded I do love to track them. I was in the
middle of a beaver swamp last fall, trying to track a wounded buck, when a good
call came in on my cell phone. It was a bear call, shot with a bow a little far
back. I track wounded deer at
night most of the time, but I draw the line on bears after dark. Since it was
already late afternoon, and the call was more than a hundred miles away, the
hunter and I agreed to meet in the morning. When I began tracking the line was
28 hours old. The hunter, Anthony Lamonaca, had done an amazing job of tracking
that bear up the Mombacus Mountain in the Catskills on the faintest drops and
smears of blood, but finally after about a half mile, he had run out of line.
The bear had gone up through a blow down area where a tornado had passed
through. It was up and down through deadfalls with lots of thick mountain
laurel to crawl through. We had to track again over most of the half mile
before we could get to the point of loss because it was in the middle of a mess
that looked like a war zone. By the way, as New York Law requires I was using a
tracking leash, thirty feet of stiff mountain climbing rope. It never got hung
up. Even though the blood had
completely stopped there was no shortage of scent and Sabina kept going. We had
no way of knowing if the bear was dead or alive. Probably we went only another
200 yards, but it seemed liked a long way in that dense cover. Sabina was
tracking along a slight trace of a path, still going up, when I saw her raise
her head. She pulled off at right angles into the wind with her head high. We
went about 50 yards through the thickest laurel I had ever seen and these was
the bear. Dead. Dead was fine with me. In the first excitement he looked as big
as a Volkswagen, much later on the scale he was a dressed 318 pounds, which is
still a big bear. Sabina jumped right in and grabbed some fur, but once she
realized the bear was dead she did not care for the smell much. Sabina was content to watch
as we gutted the bear and started to drag him down the mountain. When she finds
a deer we have to tie her up to keep her away from the work that has to be
done. We never would have moved that bear up a mountain, and as it was it took
the rest of the day to get him down the mountain and out to a four wheeler. Even
though he was not fat he was like a 300-pound sack of jelly. His head was big
and heavy ( 20 3/8" P & Y) and we had to lift it over every log or
deadfall we encountered. In the right situation a
small tracking dog can be ideal for recovering a bear, and yet most of us in
Deer Search who have been tracking wounded bear have found less than 20 percent
of the bears we track. We find a much higher percentage of deer. The reason
appears to be that a mortally wounded bear usually does not travel as far as a comparably
wounded deer before it beds down. Therefore the mortally wounded bear is more
often found by the hunters themselves. Even if there is no blood trail, a
thorough area search has a good chance of turning up that bear unless the cover
is exceptionally dense. In cases where bear are shot with a bow over bait at
close range the string tracker can also be very useful and can preclude the
need for a dog. Most of the "difficult" bears that a tracking dog is
called upon to track, when all else has failed, will not be mortally wounded
bears. It is the handler’s task to find out just what happened. If we track a
bear and determine that it is strong and traveling well the next day, we
believe that we have accomplished something. The bear is not wasted and we have
the satisfaction of knowing he will be there for next year. Anthony Lamonica’s bear was
probably an exception that proves the rule that wounded bears do not go as far
as deer. He was big and tough; he went an exceptionally long way, up hill in
the laurel before he bedded down to die.
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