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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Tragic bear attack in Wyoming
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<blockquote data-quote="RockyMtnMT" data-source="post: 1485405" data-attributes="member: 7999"><p>Got home last night from 3 days in the Mission Mountain Wilderness hunting high country muleys. The griz population in this wilderness area is high. I said earlier in this thread that these bears are diff than the park bears. They have much less human interaction and still carry a health respect for humans. We saw a griz on Fri. He was working his way across flat that we were looking down on toward us. He got to within 150y and smelled us on the switching winds and promptly exited stage left. It was comforting to see this happen. The good news is most bears want nothing to do with us.</p><p></p><p>Talked with some locals on Sat night and with the dry summer they are having high volumeof griz incidents in in residential songs this year. The bears living in low country best humans are much more bold.</p><p></p><p>Steve</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RockyMtnMT, post: 1485405, member: 7999"] Got home last night from 3 days in the Mission Mountain Wilderness hunting high country muleys. The griz population in this wilderness area is high. I said earlier in this thread that these bears are diff than the park bears. They have much less human interaction and still carry a health respect for humans. We saw a griz on Fri. He was working his way across flat that we were looking down on toward us. He got to within 150y and smelled us on the switching winds and promptly exited stage left. It was comforting to see this happen. The good news is most bears want nothing to do with us. Talked with some locals on Sat night and with the dry summer they are having high volumeof griz incidents in in residential songs this year. The bears living in low country best humans are much more bold. Steve [/QUOTE]
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