Quote:
Originally Posted by aigel
The only way to solve this is with a depredation permit. If you don't kill it, invite a friend who can and will. With the damages you have (document them), a depredation permit should be no problem to receive from your fish and game department. If they don't allow you to do the job, have them send you a depredation officer to take care of it.
This bear is a "problem bear" now that he got the taste of an easy meal. He will not change. Why go back to the woods where the food is a lot harder to get? These bears can get aggressive if you get between them and the food.
Dogs will only slightly annoy a bear. I doubt they will change a bear's behavior. The only dogs I would use are a pack of hounds trained to pursue and tree the problem bear after he came by the night before. This way you can easily dispatch it.
Cheers,
George
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This is a potential outcome. I would rather not kill the bear(s). There are several that live close by. I live quite rural, but I'm not isolated, there are other houses fairly close. Dogs and a fence could be inconvenient enough to keep them away, as the population indicates food is plentiful. We'll see.
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'86na, 5-spd, turbo front brakes, bad paint, poor turbo nose bolt-on, early sunroof switch set-up that doesn't work.
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