An Outdoorsmanās Journal: Itās all about the bearVenison Processing - recordgleaner_20250910_trg-2025-09-10-0-018_art_1.xml
An Outdoorsmanās Journal: Itās all about the bear Hello friends, As I write this, it has been 141 days since Doug Cibulka and I started running our bear baits in northern Juneau County and we are at a point where they have to be run every day if you hope to keep the bear coming in. Doug is now at ābear camp,ā a.k.a. my house, and we are doing some teal and goose hunting to pass the time. Mark Walters Monday, Sept. 1 ā High 75, low 53 As any bear baiter that has been running baits since April 25 can tell you, we are longterm tired and very excited. We run a 40-mile round trip from my house and four hikes into our stumps and it is a lot of work. In the 16 years I have been doing this, this summer has been incredible for baits being hit almost every time we check them, and by big bear. As luck would have it, the last week all of our baits but one have had a complete shutdown, and that is due to lots of berries, mushrooms, and acorns ā new food. After running the baits today, we headed out with my canoe and Red for an afternoon of goose and teal hunting, as it was opening day. warm season and I am hoping there will be no problems with that down the road. Once May came around, we did regular battle with mosquitoes and deer flies, and this was a tough year for deer flies. One day I made a mistake and forgot mosquito spray, and ran the baits in shorts, sandals, and a tank top. I was bitten so many times by deer flies that I actually became sick for a day. The annual fall insect that can be very hard on bear baiters is hornets and ground bees. On Saturday of this week, I brought a portable stand to one of our hunting locations and unknowingly threw it on top of the entrance to a ground bee nest. I was attacked and luckily only stung once, but, let me tell you, if I get stung more than once by a hornet or a bee, I have some pretty serious problems for about a week. The next morning, Doug and I did another waterfowl hunt in a different location and once again did not fire a shot. It seems like where we are hunting there are not many teal, and though there were geese all summer, they seem to have vanished. That brought us to one day and bear season would open. My buddy had his knee replaced in January so he would be in shape for this hunt. We have probably dropped $800 on bait, the same on gas, and spent countless hours in the woods. I feel thatāall-seasonābear baiters become biologists in a way, as we are in the woods from spring until well into the fall.We watch the wolf, deer, insects, waterfowl, and green up to the leaves falling, and we hope that when we are sitting in a tree when the season opens, the magnificent animal called a black bear will offer us a shot. In our case, just like not firing our guns during the waterfowl hunts, we are well aware that if we do not get a chance to harvest a bear, everything will be OK and the sun will still come up in the morning. Love this way of life! Sunset Venison Processing Black River Country Insurance Group, LLC Catering ⢠Weddings ⢠Funerals Family Reunions ⢠Company Meals We are looking into the future to better serve your needs today. ⢠Auto ⢠Commercial ⢠Farm ⢠Home ⢠Farm Bureau Life Annuities Doug and I have been friends all of our lives and now that we are both in our mid-60s, we have hit a point where if we do not fire the gun we really do not care and that is a good thing, because despite a solid effort and seeing hundreds of wood duck and mallards, we did not get a shot at a teal or a goose. We sure did see a pretty sunset and it was good to be in a canoe together. Until this summer I have not put a solid effort into training Red on waterfowl. Her mother was an excellent retriever and when Michelle passed away three years ago, Red was a pup, and I simply did not have it in me to do the training. Now that my pond is complete, Red loves it when I pull out the dummies and we play fetch. This spring when we started running the baits, first it was ticks and black flies. I actually have had 12 ticks embedded into me this Tim Voigt, Career Agent 93304 450 Hewett St., Neillsville 715-743-2800 tvoigt@ruralins.com 84607 Ryan Dillenbeck, Career Agent School Sports Calendar 102 E. Main St., Thorp 715-223-2777 715-669-5400 rdillenbeck@ruralins.com www.smithbrosmeats.com Hwy. 13 South ⢠Colby, WI 54421 Granton Greenwood Loyal spencer An Outdoorsmanās Journal: Itās all about the bear Hello friends, As I write this, it has been 141 days since Doug Cibulka and I started running our bear baits in northern Juneau County and we are at a point where they have to be run every day if you hope to keep the bear coming in. Doug is now at ābear camp,ā a.k.a. my house, and we are doing some teal and goose hunting to pass the time. Mark Walters Monday, Sept. 1 ā High 75, low 53 As any bear baiter that has been running baits since April 25 can tell you, we are longterm tired and very excited. We run a 40-mile round trip from my house and four hikes into our stumps and it is a lot of work. In the 16 years I have been doing this, this summer has been incredible for baits being hit almost every time we check them, and by big bear. As luck would have it, the last week all of our baits but one have had a complete shutdown, and that is due to lots of berries, mushrooms, and acorns ā new food. After running the baits today, we headed out with my canoe and Red for an afternoon of goose and teal hunting, as it was opening day. warm season and I am hoping there will be no problems with that down the road. Once May came around, we did regular battle with mosquitoes and deer flies, and this was a tough year for deer flies. One day I made a mistake and forgot mosquito spray, and ran the baits in shorts, sandals, and a tank top. I was bitten so many times by deer flies that I actually became sick for a day. The annual fall insect that can be very hard on bear baiters is hornets and ground bees. On Saturday of this week, I brought a portable stand to one of our hunting locations and unknowingly threw it on top of the entrance to a ground bee nest. I was attacked and luckily only stung once, but, let me tell you, if I get stung more than once by a hornet or a bee, I have some pretty serious problems for about a week. The next morning, Doug and I did another waterfowl hunt in a different location and once again did not fire a shot. It seems like where we are hunting there are not many teal, and though there were geese all summer, they seem to have vanished. That brought us to one day and bear season would open. My buddy had his knee replaced in January so he would be in shape for this hunt. We have probably dropped $800 on bait, the same on gas, and spent countless hours in the woods. I feel thatāall-seasonābear baiters become biologists in a way, as we are in the woods from spring until well into the fall.We watch the wolf, deer, insects, waterfowl, and green up to the leaves falling, and we hope that when we are sitting in a tree when the season opens, the magnificent animal called a black bear will offer us a shot. In our case, just like not firing our guns during the waterfowl hunts, we are well aware that if we do not get a chance to harvest a bear, everything will be OK and the sun will still come up in the morning. Love this way of life! Sunset Venison Processing Black River Country Insurance Group, LLC Catering ⢠Weddings ⢠Funerals Family Reunions ⢠Company Meals We are looking into the future to better serve your needs today. ⢠Auto ⢠Commercial ⢠Farm ⢠Home ⢠Farm Bureau Life Annuities Doug and I have been friends all of our lives and now that we are both in our mid-60s, we have hit a point where if we do not fire the gun we really do not care and that is a good thing, because despite a solid effort and seeing hundreds of wood duck and mallards, we did not get a shot at a teal or a goose. We sure did see a pretty sunset and it was good to be in a canoe together. Until this summer I have not put a solid effort into training Red on waterfowl. Her mother was an excellent retriever and when Michelle passed away three years ago, Red was a pup, and I simply did not have it in me to do the training. Now that my pond is complete, Red loves it when I pull out the dummies and we play fetch. This spring when we started running the baits, first it was ticks and black flies. I actually have had 12 ticks embedded into me this Tim Voigt, Career Agent 93304 450 Hewett St., Neillsville 715-743-2800 tvoigt@ruralins.com 84607 Ryan Dillenbeck, Career Agent School Sports Calendar 102 E. Main St., Thorp 715-223-2777 715-669-5400 rdillenbeck@ruralins.com www.smithbrosmeats.com Hwy. 13 South ⢠Colby, WI 54421 Granton Greenwood Loyal spencer
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