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Lets talk bear baits

Posted By: Hutchy

Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 07:58 PM

Set up some bear baits this fall. Sprayed a gallon of apple juice all over the rocks, five gallons of fryer grease all over everything, and 20 gallons of pastries.

Set at the end of October. both baits were in good spots, one where i have seen a bear in previous weeks, and neither baits were hit at all. Might be something else going on, but was kind of strange to me.

Looking really up the stink factor here for this spring.. Looking to inspire shock and awe into those I drive by when putting the bait out. Something to lure them in, as I will have a freezer full of pastries by then for bulk.

I am thinking a five gallon bucket filled with beaver guts or something and let rot for a few weeks would be a good start.

What do you guys do to get baits noticed?


Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:00 PM

Also, about five years ago, I baited one of the spots and had multiple bears coming in. Used strictly fryer grease, and it worked great. Had multiple bears in a week.
Posted By: BernieB.

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:14 PM

Probably set out too late is my guess. Start earlier, even into August. Also sweet smells work the best in the fall, and Beaver castor or shellfish oil work terrific in the spring. Not to toot my own horn but I live this stuff: https://www.ebay.com/itm/1532622430...s7ePP-2BFetp2q3jemsdIegF3QFfto63yyAZs9Jo

Really it could be a lot of things including location. Sometimes they come easy, other times not so much. It's pretty complicated getting it just right sometimes.
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:22 PM

Hey Bernie. I may have, and I will start early in the spring. I hate getting big critters in warm weather, and warm it was! Many people always get them in deer season here, which is first two weeks of Nov, so I figured a week or two would be fine. I guess not. I figured I had all the bases covered...grease, apple juice, pastries, and even a few duck carcasses. Just had fisher and coons. Lots of coons.

Usually we are swimming in bears, so I wonder about location. Often cant go wrong. Killed one this summer at a nuisance job, and had several other calls. Youd think a guy could hunt one??
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:27 PM

I like things to read. Is there a point in getting the dvd and book, or will one or the other do?

I have killed several bears with the bow, but want to up the anti a bit.
Posted By: 330-Trapper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:43 PM

I have family Save up only Bacon and Sausage Grease freeze it in Plastic Coffee cans until needed....no fryer grease for this part. With a cheap stiff paint brush I make a 1/4 mile V going away from the bait station painting softened Bacon/Sausage grease on each tree in the V walking each side . At the bait site I pour the old fryer grease where I went walk to bait, but the Bears will step in it. They'll be your tracking advertisement when they leave. I burn honey with a sterno burner while I bait, but when I hunt the coffee can honey burner gets a Candle I never could control the sterno burner while hunting...so I use a cooler burning sconce candle.
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:48 PM

I used to just do a kind of dance with the fryer grease. The bearss would eat everything the grease touched. . The bears, as you say would become a walking advertisement. Greasy trails all over. Maybe I did start too late this fall
Posted By: BernieB.

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 08:49 PM

Originally Posted by Hutchy
I like things to read. Is there a point in getting the dvd and book, or will one or the other do?

I have killed several bears with the bow, but want to up the anti a bit.





You know the DVD came after the book and has a little updated stuff, but the main thing is that a lot of people like to see stuff as well as just read about it. The DVD is over two hours and has 8 hunts on it. You can buy them separately at my website bernieoutdoors.com

Another thing, there is a TON of bear hunting videos on my youtube channel (free of course) search bowhuntingroad on youtube.

Maybe I should just come up there and learn your area with ya!
Posted By: Posco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 09:18 PM

Anise paste and molasses soaked into a Sham-Wow and hung in a tree draw bear real well in my area. We did have a very unusual year, though. Our baits didn't stay active the way they do most years. Typically a bear will find a bait by the end of the first week of baiting season (month long baiting prior to the opener) and if you keep the baits supplied they won't miss working them. Some of mine went cold for a week or two at a time once the season opened. Really left me scratching my head. Granola is my favorite bait when I can get it. Donuts or trail mix work well, too.
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 09:19 PM

A friend of mine up north of here said the same thing posco. He said he couldnt buy a bear in any of his baits, despite lots of sign, and seeing lots around.

This was northern ontario up near wawa.
Posted By: Sask hunter

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 09:39 PM

I always just do a beaver drag when I set my baits out in the spring. That usually gets a bear there within a week. I also like a good pail of grease right in front of the barrel for then to step in. Once you got one beat there you’ll have more there ASAP
Posted By: Sask hunter

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 09:43 PM

I’m already excited for spring bear hunting!!!
Posted By: 330-Trapper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 10:19 PM

Sure wish we had a spring Bear season here!
Posted By: John Porter

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 11:04 PM

If the natural feed is there its tough to compete. Seen bears hit baits hard then when the mast starts falling, baits go cold
Posted By: The Beav

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 11:14 PM

I've heard of guys burning large pots of pop corn to draw In bears.
Posted By: Boco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 11:14 PM

What John Porter said.
Baiting is hit and miss in fall for bears.
Here once they are on the blueberries,that is all they eat.
That said,you can kill a lot of bears,and pick the one you want to stalk when they are grazing in the blueberries.They are practically oblivious to anything.
I always thought baiting was way over rated if you want a lot of bear action.
Posted By: The Beav

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 11:34 PM

They like green oats. Know of a few that got killed that way.
Posted By: Sask hunter

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/04/18 11:50 PM

Originally Posted by The Beav
They like green oats. Know of a few that got killed that way.

Bears love all oats!
Posted By: Diggerman

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:07 AM

Honey over a can of sternol, use dead fish for a call lure, fryer grease drag going to and from bait, then keep it stocked with pastries or what ever.
Posted By: Ken Mclellan

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:21 AM

I like fresh bait, regardless of what it is, fresh is usually better. Fresh meat is great if you can get it. I also like to fill a spray bottle with liquid smoke and use it as an attractant and cover scent when I’m on stand. Sometimes I’ll put fish remains in onion bags and hang them high around a bait site to help get it going.
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:27 AM

Originally Posted by Boco
What John Porter said.
Baiting is hit and miss in fall for bears.
Here once they are on the blueberries,that is all they eat.
That said,you can kill a lot of bears,and pick the one you want to stalk when they are grazing in the blueberries.They are practically oblivious to anything.
I always thought baiting was way over rated if you want a lot of bear action.



Our berry crop failed miserably. No rain at all all summer. The few I did see were in drainage spots that collected the short rain showers we did get.

As for spotting and stalking, occasionally you see them in the islands, mostly swimming when in the boat. Bush is so thick you can be right on top of them and not know it!

Any logging roads on my lines are grown up with raspberries and blackberries six feet high.

How the heck do you spot them ??
Posted By: Boco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:35 AM

Didn't you just have a huge fire there?Is that the only fire that has ever burned there?Old burns are prime areas to spot and stalk bears in fall when the blueberries are thick.
In farming areas oat fields in the fall are good spots also,and the farmers are likely to be glad to be rid of them.
In spring you can sneak up on them without actually spotting them if you get the wind when they are in the old beaver meadows or other natural openings in the bush near lakes etc-sneak up on the meadow.Of course old clearcuts are great bear country spring and fall(when there is a good blueberry crop).
Leave the gas engine machinery at home until after the kill.Its all about walking.You got to overcome all their senses and smell and hearing are the two big ones for bears.
Posted By: Ken Mclellan

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:41 AM

The strangest things I ever used for bait was a pig hide. The thing must’ve weighed 75 pounds or more. I hung it from a nail in a black ash tree then wrapped it from top to bottom with 16 gauge wire. Believe it or not, when the bears found it they chewed through the wire and ate the hide and part of the tree. Lol. Maybe just a little overkill.
Posted By: 330-Trapper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:13 AM

Originally Posted by Ken Mclellan
The strangest things I ever used for bait was a pig hide. The thing must’ve weighed 75 pounds or more. I hung it from a nail in a black ash tree then wrapped it from top to bottom with 16 gauge wire. Believe it or not, when the bears found it they chewed through the wire and ate the hide and part of the tree. Lol. Maybe just a little overkill.

Now That's cool!
Posted By: 330-Trapper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:15 AM

Originally Posted by 330-Trapper
Originally Posted by Ken Mclellan
The strangest things I ever used for bait was a pig hide. The thing must’ve weighed 75 pounds or more. I hung it from a nail in a black ash tree then wrapped it from top to bottom with 16 gauge wire. Believe it or not, when the bears found it they chewed through the wire and ate the hide and part of the tree. Lol. Maybe just a little overkill.

Now That's cool!

*** I hope it was "cured" according to Mn. Law on baiting w/pig
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:23 AM

Originally Posted by Boco
Didn't you just have a huge fire there?Is that the only fire that has ever burned there?Old burns are prime areas to spot and stalk bears in fall when the blueberries are thick.
In farming areas oat fields in the fall are good spots also,and the farmers are likely to be glad to be rid of them.
In spring you can sneak up on them without actually spotting them if you get the wind when they are in the old beaver meadows or other natural openings in the bush near lakes etc-sneak up on the meadow.Of course old clearcuts are great bear country spring and fall(when there is a good blueberry crop).
Leave the gas engine machinery at home until after the kill.Its all about walking.You got to overcome all their senses and smell and hearing are the two big ones for bears.

A


No burns here. I have a few forty year old charred stumps on my line, but the pines beside them are two feet in diameter. And no farms within 30 k of me at least.

The odd cattail Marsh here. Just lots of rock, trees, water, rock trees, water...repeat. my best bet is to wait for the summer and wait for my phone to ring lol

Last nuisance job this summer was on a kilometer Long island. Cedars were so thick the bear was just playing with us. Took me a bit to learn his escape trails to stay away from me, and me and a buddy got him. Smart buggers. Will be inside the cottage one minute, and turn into a ghost the next.
Posted By: Boco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:31 AM

Well after the fire last summer you should have plenty of opportunity in a couple years,lol.30 k here is a small distance.what about hunting with dogs-is that legal in Ont?
Posted By: scalloper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:48 AM

I normally put out 10-12 baits with pacer,doughnuts,oil or sweets. Put a sent rag up high in a tree with anis and some LDC with skunk essence under a small limb. I tend them for a month or so and keep the 5-6 best ones.
Posted By: Posco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:55 AM

Anise on a rag.

https://youtu.be/jDZVk2PoJCA
Posted By: bucksnbears

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 03:19 AM

The more I do this, the simpler I get.
Sometimes anything will work, sometimes few things will work..
Bears are slaves to thier stomachs. If natural foods sources are slim, they WILL do amazing things to eat.
There is no magic formula!? There is no magic scent!

Posted By: HFT AK

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 05:12 AM

You have skunks in your area Hutchy? We don't up here, I mix a shot of essence with a big spray bottle of cooking oil and lay a trail and spray it high. I also use left over skunk and Vaseline. When I run out of that it's loganberry oil, sweet smelling and strong.
Posted By: scalloper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 11:49 AM

They can be very difficult with no rime or reason for what they do. I trap and hunt over baits. I had one logging road I set baits on that was only a mile long. I always set my baits according to the prevailing wind. I set three baits within a mile. One was getting slammed, the bears were eating a barrel and a half per week probably more if I would have taken more in. The 2ed bait got hit twice all fall the 3ed bait rotted in the barrel.
This happens quite often. When I am setting baits for trapping I dont care how close they are to the next bait because I am looking for "trap locations" I only set blind sets so I want alot of options and alot of trails.
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:37 PM

Originally Posted by HFT AK
You have skunks in your area Hutchy? We don't up here, I mix a shot of essence with a big spray bottle of cooking oil and lay a trail and spray it high. I also use left over skunk and Vaseline. When I run out of that it's loganberry oil, sweet smelling and strong.



Actually no. No skunks whatsoever....and then, six miles out by water, on an island on the outside of the bay, I caught my first ever skunk a month ago. A juvenile. Only guess is someone was getting a septic done and one got brought out in a load of fill on a barge. I mean, I know they swim, but having no one I know of ever getting one to that is a bit much. I saved the quill, maybe use it in the spring if I have any left from fisher season.
Posted By: Posco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 12:44 PM

https://youtu.be/PlL9xyKWILU

https://youtu.be/fUXo1O-1gVw
Posted By: Animals Only

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:31 PM

Peanut butter, pasteries, granola, caramel, dried cherries are a few of the things I used to take my bear this year. We had a ton of acorns and berries of every kind. Natural foods are hard to compete with. Start as soon as you can and make your bait better than the hunters next to you. Also don't put out too much bait at one time. If you have what they want, they will be the first ones in before it's all gone.
Posted By: Osky

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 01:48 PM

Hutchy a plastic 2 gallon or so pail on the back of your atv or whatever you use to get to your bait. Lay the container on its side off the back of the machine and crack the lid or even punch a small hole in it and let that drip as you drive to the bait. Sometimes I start the drip two miles out or better. Drip used cooking oil or whatever.

I have noticed bears are pretty open to bait offerings earlier in the fall. As the fall progresses they seem to single out a certain food or two and if it's plentiful they stay on it. Bears here go away from the sweets as fall gets late. I know an area with some agriculture where I have seen bears walk right past incredibly good baits that they had been pounding for weeks just to eat certain crops when the crop is ripened to where they like it and eat that exclusively right up to denning.

Personally I stay away from pastry. I use other things with lots of oil mixed in. With less pastry I get a lot more droppings around the baits. I think the pastry plugs them up a bit, I want them pooping and returning for more as much as possible. Keep in mind not all used grease is the same.

Osky
Posted By: 330-Trapper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 02:33 PM

Another good Fall bait is Beef suet trimmings... a certain butcher I know well let's me know when I can stop inside the door and glean suet. No red meat to spoil....but put in it's own barrel from other boats late fall and they many times clean out the suet. I've tried dog food and black oil sunflower ...items they go crazy for in the spring...but like Osky said they change closer to donning time.
Posted By: RM trapper

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 03:41 PM

My uncle uses big peppermint blocks, you can smell it for miles when they are melting it down to make smaller easier to carry blocks. Works great and ain't bad to lick on yourself
Posted By: J.Morse

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 06:15 PM

I'm not even close to being an expert bear bait guy, but I do have over 40 years experience feeding the darn things. I think Bernie hit the nail on the head with saying you were a bit late. Bear do pig out big-time in the fall, and some will, much to the dismay of deer hunters, haunt a deer bait well into December at times, but most of them don't. The majority of bear shut down before Halloween in our area. Collaring studies showed nearly all sows with cubs were denning before the end of October, and the majority of boars were denning soon after that. Also, as stated above several times, a dump of natural foods will shut a bait down literally overnight. Bear can be maddeningly simple to bait in at times, and the next year in the same stump, maddeningly absent! My All Purpose Boy set a bait on his own land in '15 and not one bear even drizzled past to sniff it. Fast forward to '17 when I had a tag....that was a Super Bait....we had 10-12 (?) separate bear feeding on it. Same spot, same type of feed, same, same. Some years you look like a bear guru, the next your left with performance anxiety!
Posted By: Posco

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 06:51 PM

This guy finally went to bed, but he might be out again if we get a thaw. I've seen them active during a February warm spell.

The best bear bait I've ever used was from Nature Valley Granola. I had a connection with a guy in southern Maine who bought out their bad stock. Sometimes you'd run across a wrapper in the mix. Bears would not leave it, ever. He must have lost his connection because I haven't been able to get it in quite some time.



[Linked Image]
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 07:34 PM

Looking like I started too late. I will start in august next year.

I will also go for one in the spring. Question, what do people find they are more into in the spring. Sweet stuff,...grease, meat..?
Posted By: Osky

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 07:47 PM

We can’t spring bait. I do see most bears here in the bush in clear cuts most often in the spring eating the early spring geeens of many varieties. They hit these and rotten stumps for bugs, and skunk cabbage until the berries start coming in.

Osky
Posted By: BernieB.

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 08:01 PM

Originally Posted by Hutchy
Looking like I started too late. I will start in august next year.

I will also go for one in the spring. Question, what do people find they are more into in the spring. Sweet stuff,...grease, meat..?



Granola and trail mix work great in the spring. Grains also, such as corn and oats sweetened with molasses. You can definitely over-sugar the bears in the spring. More natural type stuff is good in the spring where high-carb stuff is better in the fall.
Posted By: DaYooper14

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 08:13 PM

I'm relegated to whole, unprocessed foods and no animal parts which boils down to unblanched/unsalted peanuts, apples, pumpkins, grain & oats. It's horrendous. The bears, that we are shooting mind you, are required to be organic smile
Back home - beaver carcass & anything sweet we could get our hands on would do the trick. Castor glands in the trees to get it started. Sounds like you got your answer above though. Good luck!
Posted By: Hutchy

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 08:18 PM

Cool. SOunds good. I often put a punch of super cheap dogfood in the mix, but ideally I would like to bait for free of next to it.

I know the popcorn trick is a good one. I can get popcorn for very cheap, beaver carcasses obviously, all the pastries, bread and fryer grease I could ever want. Thats about the extent of my options.

I will just give them a mixture and see what they prefer I guess. Pastries and popcorn for bulk.

I recall hearing about someone who fills a 45 gallon drum with expired supermarket meat, puts the lid on for it for a month, then takes it out on a trailer, and takes the bung out as he drives to the bait site. .

A long distance call if there ever was one. Maybe Ill try that with a couple five gallon pails
Posted By: Sask hunter

Re: Lets talk bear baits - 12/05/18 08:55 PM

Bread/pastries grease beaver carcasses and oats. Works good all spring. Soon as the ice comes off catch about 20-30 beavers and you’ll be good for a couple baits all spring
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