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#1
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I've been deer hunting a small peice of property not far from my house for the past few years and always seen a few deer and hogs throughout the deer season and my scouting time in the woods. This year I did the same as the past years threw feed and put out feeders but obviously attracted some unwanted bears. Now I'm not seeing nearly as much sign of deer or pigs in the area. Anyone has some advice on how to get the bears out of the area? I stopped feeding about a week ago I hopes that they move to another area to find other food. Thanks in advance!
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#2
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Contact WLF. They can probably trap and relocate them.
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#3
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#4
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Is it legal to shoot them with a rubber bullet or something non lethal? I would think after getting peppered with that a few times it would get the hint and move along.
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#5
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#6
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Hypothetically right? |
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#8
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They are hardly ever aggressive, I wouldn't worry about them. Just think about why they are there - there is food. Discontinue feeding them and they have no reason to be where you are. That is the politically correct answer Now that being said, if one was trying to climb a tree I am in and/or threatening me I would have not one iota of care to shoot him with some rubber buckshot |
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#9
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#10
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I have some pics of one that was sitting in the back of my truck. I left a packaged sandwich back there to heat up while I was gone. |
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#11
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#12
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I used to hunt as a guest of Chet Morrison at Belle Isle a few times a year and they were given rubber buckshot by the LDWF to use on the bears if they became a nuisance.
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#13
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So just because the bears are in the area doesn't necessarily mean that they running the deer off correct?
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#14
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You probably aren't going to see a deer in the same company as a bear, but they live together just fine. Usually on our game cameras, once the bear shows up the deer go away and come back when he/she leaves. Bears can and do eat deer if they are an easy target (like a fawn) but they pretty much just go after the easy pickings like a corn feeder or trashcan when its available
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#15
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This was at the McLemore Tract of Tensas NWR. If you want your best opportunity to see a bear in Louisiana, this area would be up there
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#16
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This was a giant male the guys from University of TN tried to catch to weigh but he was trap shy
The one in a tree was one that was having cubs. They 'hibernate' and give birth during that time |
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#17
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And here are a couple other random pics from that folder
The ducks stack up on the MS River (canvasbacks and scaup) at Tallabena, they wait for the barges to offload corn and eat the scraps. Literally thousands of them, and when I took this pic and looked closer there was a surf scoter (top left) in the pic, kinda unusual for North Louisiana The gobbler was strutting in the middle of winter and the other is a random I just saw |
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#18
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I saw a black bear last year in the Mclemore area that was literally as big as my 4 wheeler.
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#19
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They are tick over there. That area is also home to some big deer. Seems that where there are lotsa bears there are big deer.
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#20
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I'd just smoke check that critter, drag it off far enough that I couldn't smell it and continue deer hunting. Bear meat isn't very good anyway. That's just me though.
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