Advice for hunting the bear

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Deleted member 10987

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Spears ?
No guns allowed
I need his heart and head as trophies for proving my hunt
57d6237ad814dd50f4c6fdc8e9b44cd7
 
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You need a long ranged weapon. No way any human can kill a bear without it.
 
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1614956035929


over if cant kill bear with bear hands ngl
over for wolfcucks
 
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bears mog
 
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Nigh impossible to actually kill a full grown bear without proper weapons. Even the strongest humans would get destroyed. Some people even saw them as gods in the past.​

Your only chance is to go after a VERY small bear and catch it while its asleep.​

 
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There are no bears in France lol
 
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Dolph Ziggler Reaction GIF by WWE

Only Spears allowed
 
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Nigh impossible to actual kill a full grown bear without proper weapons. Even the strongest humans would get destroyed. Some people even saw them as gods in the past.​

Your only chance is to go after a VERY small bear and catch it while its asleep.​

Then how do we BTFO them in the past ?
 
just show them ur face and they'll die of a heartattack
 
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Then how do we BTFO them in the past ?

Native Americans​

Attitudes about bears have changed over time. Native Americans viewed bears as intelligent, near-human animals that provided food and clothing. Some clans speared hibernating bears in dens and performed elaborate ceremonies to show respect, appease their spirits, and thank the bears for giving their lives. Native Americans had little effect on bear populations.​

European Settlers​

European settlers had much greater impact on bear populations. They cleared millions of acres of forest to create farms. They used poison, traps, and guns to rid the land of bears, wolves, and any other animals they thought might threaten them, their crops, or their farm animals. Bears were often gut-shot to die somewhere off in the woods.​

Killings took their toll​

Bounties, market hunting, and unrestricted killing by landowners and hunters took their toll. By the early 1900’s, black bears were eliminated from nearly half of their former range in the Lower 48. Grizzly bears were eliminated from 98 percent of their range in that same area.​

Fear-mongering at bear expense​

By the 1940’s, hunting magazines were shamelessly exaggerating the danger from bears, making heroes of the hunters who killed them. This fear-mongering continues to the present at huge expense to bear populations nationwide. In the mid-1900’s, excessive fear led people to eliminate bears from more and more of their former range. Bounties on black bears persisted through 1965, bringing populations to their lowest point in recorded history.​

A national wildlife conscience forms​

In the early 1900’s, the nation began to develop a conscience that opposed the destruction of America's wildlife and natural resources. One group working for reform was the Boone and Crockett Club, founded in 1887 by Theodore Roosevelt. Club members worked to abolish industrial hunting, address issues affecting wildlife and its habitat, and create national parks, national forests, and wildlife refuges. They wrote a Fair Chase statement outlining a code of ethics for sport hunting. However, this conscience remained in its infancy until mid century.​
 
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Native Americans​

Attitudes about bears have changed over time. Native Americans viewed bears as intelligent, near-human animals that provided food and clothing. Some clans speared hibernating bears in dens and performed elaborate ceremonies to show respect, appease their spirits, and thank the bears for giving their lives. Native Americans had little effect on bear populations.​

European Settlers​

European settlers had much greater impact on bear populations. They cleared millions of acres of forest to create farms. They used poison, traps, and guns to rid the land of bears, wolves, and any other animals they thought might threaten them, their crops, or their farm animals. Bears were often gut-shot to die somewhere off in the woods.​

Killings took their toll​

Bounties, market hunting, and unrestricted killing by landowners and hunters took their toll. By the early 1900’s, black bears were eliminated from nearly half of their former range in the Lower 48. Grizzly bears were eliminated from 98 percent of their range in that same area.​

Fear-mongering at bear expense​

By the 1940’s, hunting magazines were shamelessly exaggerating the danger from bears, making heroes of the hunters who killed them. This fear-mongering continues to the present at huge expense to bear populations nationwide. In the mid-1900’s, excessive fear led people to eliminate bears from more and more of their former range. Bounties on black bears persisted through 1965, bringing populations to their lowest point in recorded history.​

A national wildlife conscience forms​

In the early 1900’s, the nation began to develop a conscience that opposed the destruction of America's wildlife and natural resources. One group working for reform was the Boone and Crockett Club, founded in 1887 by Theodore Roosevelt. Club members worked to abolish industrial hunting, address issues affecting wildlife and its habitat, and create national parks, national forests, and wildlife refuges. They wrote a Fair Chase statement outlining a code of ethics for sport hunting. However, this conscience remained in its infancy until mid century.​
Based natives
 
Good luck, I mean, you'd die anyway so you don't even need luck tbh

 
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Just use a good knife
 
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