Western Hunting Journal, Vol. 1, Issue 3 whj013_final | Page 89

TRAIL’S END Continued from page 88 it. Once we got our differences worked out around the camp- fire and decided how to hunt the area without interfering with each other, he turned into a fertile source of lore and opinion. In addition to Kodiak bears, he also guided Dall sheep hunt- ers in the Brooks Range. “If I have a sheep hunter who is in reasonably good shape and can shoot a rifle,” he told me over a shared dinner one night, “I can almost guarantee him a good ram. But spring brown bears? That’s a whole different story.” I got a taste of what he meant on that trip, but the lesson didn’t really sink home until I started working as an assistant guide on the Alaska Peninsula several years later. Popular impressions of the Alaska brown bear almost all arise from spots like McNeil River and Brooks Falls, where bears are protected, habitu- ated to people, easy to pho- tograph, and present in large numbers when feeding on red salmon returning to freshwater streams to spawn. I’ve bounced off dozens of them a day at close range when fly-fishing in Katmai National Park. But in areas where they aren’t treated as tourist attractions they are completely different animals, especially in the spring when they are widely dispersed. Just finding a mature boar then can be difficult. Killing one can be even harder. When I turned my attention in the opposite direction, I could see tracks start to appear in the snowfields high on the flanks of the mountains as bears began to rouse from their dens. Those bears were many miles beyond hiking distance, but we knew it was only a matter of time until they walked down the valley toward us in search of food. Spring bear season on the Peninsula takes place in late May, when daylight floods the tundra landscape almost con- stantly. A hill requiring perhaps thirty minutes of steep but pleasant climbing rose behind our camp, and one of us was always on top of it with bin- oculars and spotting scope. I enjoyed the solitude there, and never minded taking my turn. If I pointed my optics downhill I could watch big rainbow trout rising to the surface of one of the world’s most celebrated trout streams, and the lake was usually alive with courting wa- terfowl. When I turned my atten- tion in the opposite direction, I could see tracks start to ap- pear in the snowfields high on the flanks of the mountains as bears began to rouse from their dens. Those bears were many miles beyond hiking distance, but we knew it was only a mat- ter of time until they walked down the valley toward us in search of food. We knew it, but sometimes our hunters didn’t. If one of them really wanted to take off through the alders and corn snow to look for a bear I was always glad to do it, but I’d learned my lesson back on Ko- diak. I like to cover ground as much as anyone, but successful spring brown bear hunts are far more likely to begin with hours of patient glassing than with miles of ambitious walking. The trick is to adopt a frame of mind that allows you to enjoy those hours even when they don’t in- clude any bears. But eventually, they always did. The sudden appearance of a big boar lumbering across the tundra—its gait pigeon-toed, its head swinging rhythmically from side to side—could affect the mood atop that glassing hill like a volcanic eruption as ques- tions began to swirl. How big was it? What would the wind be doing across the valley? What would be the best route of approach? Then the part of the bear hunt that everyone en- visions when they think about bear hunting would begin. Those were always excit- ing times, for there is no such thing as a casual stalk on a 10- foot bear. They also served to illustrate the respect that old Kodiak guide had for the quar- ry. Never mind the misconcep- tions created by all those doc- umentaries filmed in National Parks. A brown bear that has grown large enough to shoot has seen it all, and may be the wariest, most calculating game animal on the continent. Patience is just as important during the final hours of the hunt as it is during the days that precede it. I did eventually kill a spring brown bear of my own—with a longbow no less, at a range of perhaps fifteen yards. Every bit as exciting as it sounds, that remains another story for another day. But somehow the events I remember most from all those days afield came pri- or to the moment of truth: the lone white wolf that walked by me as I huddled in the rain on the glassing hill, the cow moose that lost her newborn calf to a bear after a ferocious but futile defense. Those memories matter just as much as the dead bears now, and they came purely as a result of patience. www.westernhuntingjournal.com 87