Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6116251
01/06/18 10:51 PM
01/06/18 10:51 PM
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Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 559 Fairbanks Alaska
AKHowler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 559
Fairbanks Alaska
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Happy New Year Brian to you and yours
Alaskan #9 Trap Company JR Pederson PO BOX 58226 Fairbanks AK 99711 cell# 907-378-7291 pedersonjr@yahoo.com
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6117666
01/07/18 09:53 PM
01/07/18 09:53 PM
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Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 148 North Slope
Nunamiut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 148
North Slope
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Are those the plastic tracks on the Argo? How you like them?
If it was easy, everybody would be doing it!
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6123526
01/13/18 11:29 AM
01/13/18 11:29 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017 Alberta
Bushman
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017
Alberta
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Just back in from the trapline. We've been under a cold weather advisory for a week but it's warming up today. With a beautiful sunset last night I connected with the kit that ate its mommy last week. I also took a big male in another foothold The wolves haven't been around for a couple weeks but as I was sledding out I hit the packs tracks heading towards my sets. But they deviated off the trail 30 yards from where I have a series of footholds. I'm thinking they picked up scent of fresh urine I used and are wary of it...for now.
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6126828
01/15/18 11:03 PM
01/15/18 11:03 PM
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Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 605 Central PA, God's Country
PAlltheway
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 605
Central PA, God's Country
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oh yea... he got his ram. Beautiful full curl - 29 mile pack from kill site to truck so he earned it. No BS he shot it within 1/4 mile of where I suggested he hunt. He called me this morning so excited and pumped up, and appreciative. By the way he said it was a 500lb. + black bear that charged him to within 20 yds while he was going through a raspberry patch. Normally I'd say BS to a black that big but we've seen this bear before and its a monster. Glad to see his ram was the only thing killed. Wonderful story. Great ram. Just a quick "me-too" on the huge black bear experience. November 2017 I did what has been an annual solo hunt in Adirondack designated wilderness. Five mile hike in from pretty remote trail head. Absolutely no one else anywhere around. Always looked for a bear but usually see deer there. 3AM my first night I could hear an enormous bear approaching my tent. Because it was 13 degrees F out, I was bundled up tight in the mummy bag. Getting caught inside a tent as a huge predator attacks is a recipe for death or serious injury, so I struggled to get out and confront the bear with a headlamp and hunting rifle. The faint light beam lit up the huge bear and I said out loud "One more step and this will be the shortest hunting trip I have ever had." He stared and studied and then turned and went around the lake. I went back to bed. Next day I am way up on this snowy mountain, far from camp, and I hear a ruckus below me. It's the bear, hot on my trail. At fifty feet he stops, looks at me, starts sniffing (am I pepperoni pizza?), and I shoot for his neck. He turns and runs. No blood in the snow, and later I find the small beech twig that deflected the bullet. I figure the deer have heard this mess, and I descend the mountain and do a mile-long sneak down below, leading me back up to the base of the mountain, at its far southern foot. It's a wild area where I have sat and watched fisher, pine marten. Really a quiet spot. Here and there I'd hear twigs snapping up top, and I put it down to spooked deer or heavy snow breaking spruce branches. Well...as soon as I sat down on a rock on a deer path where I killed the biggest deer I have ever seen in the wild some years ago, I hear a twig snap. Looking up hill I see a flash of black fur. No way, the bear is coming back, but this time he is sneaking in. A minute later he is peeking at me through the space between two fallen trees above me, and slowly gathering himself for the rush and pounce. When I saw what I was sure was his neck in my sights (no scope, I am super old school), I fired. He went down at thirty yards. After his death moans died off, I slowly picked my way up to him and then put two more into his chest. Based on the photos and the size and weight of his hide (54 pounds fleshed, squared over six feet without the head, with the head 77 inches long), head, etc we estimated him at close to 600 pounds. When people say black bears aren't predatory or dangerous to humans, I can say one literally tried to eat me. Undeterred by getting shot at. A total predator. I will never see them the same way again, and I have enthusiastically hunted black bears for a long time. Your guy had a real run-in with one, too, and was lucky.
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6129929
01/18/18 05:06 PM
01/18/18 05:06 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017 Alberta
Bushman
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017
Alberta
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Just returned from another run to pick up some supplies and my wife and head back out. Plus just had lunch with a couple fellow trappers so life is good. One of the small kits I caught had some nice spots on the belly. Closest I'll ever come to a bobcat I'm thinking I picked up a larger female from the same set a couple days ago. I even had to build me a new stretcher as I left them in town. Because of weather conditions travel upriver has been dangerous so I've been forced to trap in a very small area. But recent cold snaps have tightened things up and I headed up river on this trip. The extreme cold we had forced overflow up a few feet on top of existing ice and then froze hard. Where I typically bang across rocks is now a frozen skating rink. Made for really good going.
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6129951
01/18/18 05:24 PM
01/18/18 05:24 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017 Alberta
Bushman
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017
Alberta
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I love coming around this corner and seeing the vista in front of me. Nothing between me and the ocean but solid bush It was good to open the door to the cabin and see everything was tight and mouse free I elevated my floor for storage and to take advantage of the view The only frustrating thing about getting older is knowing that I'll never have enough time to see everything I want to see in this paradise. But I still have a few miles left in me.
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6130111
01/18/18 07:28 PM
01/18/18 07:28 PM
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Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 9,669 Northern MN
Osky
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 9,669
Northern MN
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Thanks Bush... Could you elaborate a bit more on the wolverine scratch tree? How hi they mark, how often they have these trees, how often they visit the trees, more so or less so at certain times of the year, will multiples use the same tree, any type of tree they prefer? The last may be a silly question if you do not have much variety.
Thanks for the wonderful views
Osky
www.SureDockusa.com“ I said I don’t have much use for traps these days, never said I didn’t know how to use them.”
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6130774
01/19/18 10:22 AM
01/19/18 10:22 AM
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Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 54 Alberta
Moose maniac
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 54
Alberta
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I ran into some fresh wolverine tracks at a location that I had caught one at before. Originally I set for lynx at the site because of a clawed up tree. But I've since discovered its a wolverines scent posting tree. I started out by excavating the bole of a tree and placing a bait. It's about 10 yards from the scratch tree. [img:gal:15445a611c03cb9f5] https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2018/01/full-1544-401792-18_gulo_set.And hope that the finished product will snag one before the season ends. I also placed a foothold at the base of the scratch tree. Good luck on the wolverine Brian once I figure out how to post pics on here I will post some of the collared wolverine I caught this year along with the map showing his travels for a 3 month period.
Last edited by Moose maniac; 01/19/18 10:25 AM.
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6135655
01/23/18 06:00 PM
01/23/18 06:00 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017 Alberta
Bushman
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1,017
Alberta
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Thanks for comments. I will let you know how locks work out Just back for the day then back out. Spent a nice few days with the wife coming along. Always a good idea to marry a farm girl they know how to work. Looks like the canines are breeding. Trailed a couple coyotes for a few miles and lots of frolicking and playing based on their tracks in the snow. Plus blood in the urine Picked up the last kitten out of the family that chewed their mom up. The young lynx sure have nice bellies
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Re: Mountain Journal
[Re: Bushman]
#6135878
01/23/18 08:53 PM
01/23/18 08:53 PM
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Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 605 Central PA, God's Country
PAlltheway
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 605
Central PA, God's Country
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I love coming around this corner and seeing the vista in front of me. Nothing between me and the ocean but solid bush It was good to open the door to the cabin and see everything was tight and mouse free I elevated my floor for storage and to take advantage of the view The only frustrating thing about getting older is knowing that I'll never have enough time to see everything I want to see in this paradise. But I still have a few miles left in me. You are fortunate, Bushman, that is some spectacular wilderness. Please keep posting. Here in PA we hunt bears pretty hard. Our firearms season is just four days long, and we kill about 3,000-4,000 bears a year. A few are picked up in early archery and extended seasons that are an extra couple of days or so in a few high problem areas. It is rare for people to have run-ins with bears here, because they are so conditioned to being hunted by people. Mamas with cubs excepted, of course.
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