The black bears descent was
halted as he crashed into some alders. As we skinned the black bear, we watched
the spruces for the silver-tipped grizzly until dark. The grizzly never
appeared, but the black bear was a good consolation trophy. We got back to camp
late that night exhausted and disappointed at not having bagged the huge
grizzly.
The next day was spent in camp
resting and salting down the moose and black bear hides. Len and Jim spent another miserable day hunting in the rain without rain gear.
During the night, it snowed lightly and the temperature dropped to zero.
Sid and I started out early on
the eighth day of the hunt. We were about three miles from camp when Sid froze
in his tracks. He said he had spotted a blonde grizzly in the high mountain basin
opposite us. He said that both he and Wayne had made several unsuccessful
attempts at stalking this bear in past years. At first, I could not make out
the bear on the fall colored mountain, then I spotted the golden creature
swaggering along near the top of the basin.
Adrenaline was pumping as we
raced up the steep ridge opposite the basin. The wind direction was in our
favor and the basin was relatively open, but as I topped over the ridge to
shoot, the Grizzly was gone! Sid and I were both reminded of the big silvertips
escape two days before. It is hard to describe how depressed I felt after again
being so close to achieving a lifelong goal. We side hilled to the spot where
we had last seen him and followed his huge tracks. For over three hours, we tracked
the grizzly, hoping he would pause to feed on the lush berry patches so we
could catch up.
When we came to a huge bowl
shaped basin, we knew it was as far as we could go. The grizzly’s tracks led
straight downhill into thick alders. We decided to wait there the rest of the
day and glass for other bears. We had all but given up on finding the elusive
blonde grizzly. As we sat down for lunch Sid whispered, “There he is!” I saw
the grizzly we had been tracking, towering over the brush less than fifty yards
away! He had heard us and stood up to investigate who was on his mountain.
The grizzly’s chest filled the
scope as I placed the cross hairs on target and pulled the trigger. Nothing
happened! I lowered the rifle and stared at it in disbelief; then I realized
the safety was on! Sid caught my “bear fever” and ejected a chambered .350
round and bolted in another. A grizzly at fifty yards can be a traumatic
experience. Just as I was sighting on his chest again, he dropped down on all
fours into the brush.
I had a sick feeling he was
getting away and Sid thought the grizzly was coming our way. We ran uphill to
get a better angle. This is the scene I described in the beginning of the
story. The grizzly bounded out of the brush and had covered two hundred yards
when I sat back against the hillside and fired. I saw the impact just behind
the front shoulder as a solid thud echoed back. The grizzly lurched sideways as
the bullet struck, but continued his ground eating stride toward the top of the
snow lined basin. I fired a second shot that flew high, kicking up dirt just
over his back. As I chambered a third round, Sid yelled, “He’s rolling! You got
him!” All of the self-imposed pressure was suddenly off.