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I waited fifteen minutes, then went in to look. No blood or hair at shot-site, no blood on the trail. Went to marsh-same results. Had the land-owner come out to help look. Long story short, nothing found to track, his dog didn’t pick anything up and after 2.5 hours we called it off until morning.
In the morning, a good 150yards from the shot-site, in the cedars abutting the marsh, one dinner-plate site of red blood ( not bubbly lung, no green, just red-muscle blood) was found, with two further spots of small deposits on leaves within ten yards, and then, nothing. Nothing at all. We searched for a further three hours in all directions. None of the marsh grass had any blood on it, which would have showed up nicely on the yellowed and dry grass, and nothing further was found. After searching out to 350 yards or so from the shot site, we stopped.
The bear is unrecovered.
I have put the rifle aside and will range test to see if it was knocked out of zero, or some such. I’ve gone over it in my mind and am confident that the shots broke well. I am a decent tracker, as is the landowner, and am confident we missed nothing. Might we have pushed a wounded bear? Possibly. Could it be a grazing wound that bled just a bit, or I was it one of those timed when thick fur and fat stop the bleeding from reaching the ground? If a solid double lung hit, then I would have expected to find a nasal-spray of blood where we saw it had left blood behind.
Needless to say, it is a sad result, and I am gut-sick about it. I’m not off hunting bears, just very disappointed in the outcome and trying to record what’s happened so as to avoid a repeat in future.
Sad news but it happens. Anyone who has hunted game has or will eventually loose an animal.
Never hunted bear so have no comments based on any experience. But one of our European members 93mouse I believe is a specialist on following up wounded game and especially bear, with his hound. For other European hunters in his area who have lost game. Obviously there is a need for such services. And I guess bear is regularly needing follow up.
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