Man kills 400Lb bear with a .22

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jsalcedo

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Bear killed: Marquand man feared 400-lb. bear was going to attack dog

By SCOTT MOYERS ~ SEMO News Service
MARQUAND -- A 400-pound black bear was found dead Monday morning near Marquand, a day after it was shot three times by a resident who said he was afraid the bear was going to attack his dog.

Though it is illegal to kill black bears in Missouri, the man who shot the bear will not be charged because he was protecting his property, said Ken West, regional supervisor with the Missouri Department of Conservation in Cape Girardeau. The name of the man who killed the bear was unavailable Monday night.

The bear first showed up at the man's house, 3 miles south of Marquand near the Bollinger-Madison county line, on Saturday night, West said. The man ran the bear off Saturday night after it ripped boards off his shed to get to some animal feed.

Uncharacteristically, the bear returned Sunday night.

"Normally, once you run a bear off, he doesn't come back," West said. "But he came back. The guy tried to run it off again, but the bear apparently stood his ground."

The man said the bear stood up on its hind legs as the man's dog advanced. Standing up, the bear was 6 feet tall.

"He was afraid the bear was going to tear up his dog," West said. "So apparently he shot the bear three times."

The man used a .22-caliber rifle. The wounded bear ran into the woods, West said, and the man called the Bollinger County Sheriff's Department, which contacted the Department of Conservation.

The bear couldn't be located that night. The next morning, the man called the agency and said he'd found the bear dead 150 yards from the shed.

Monday morning, conservation agents retrieved the bear, a male, and stored the carcass in the walk-in freezer of a Fredericktown, Mo., taxidermist.

On Wednesday a member of the department's wildlife staff will transport the bear to Columbia, Mo., to be analyzed. The department will study stomach contents to see what it had eaten recently, take DNA samples and determine its age.

West said it's unusual for a bear sighting to end in a killing.

"He had damage to his property," he said. "We're confident this wasn't a case where the bear was just ambling by and he shot it."

West said agents had received reports of two black bears in that area during the past two or three weeks.

The black bear is the smallest bear in North America and the only one native to Missouri. Adult males generally weigh 200 to 600 pounds, and adult females weigh 100 to 300 pounds. Although most bears in Missouri are black, color varies from brown to blond.

West said multiple sightings of two bears had been made in Madison and Bollinger counties in the last few weeks. While sightings in Cape Girardeau County aren't impossible, West said, bears don't usually go into areas with high concentrations of people or traffic.

http://www.darnews.com/articles/2005/05/17/news/news7.txt


http://www.kfvs12.com/Global/story.asp?S=3359026&nav=8H3xa0ov
 
This just proves why we should fight hard to preserve our right to keep and arm bears!
 
So... the front sight should only be filed off in Brown Bear/Grizzly territory? :confused:

Had that bear been wearing protective body armor (made of dry-wall), this wouldn't have happened. :scrutiny:

:neener:
 
This one reminds me of that guy, while checking out what was in his henhouse, found a sow Grizly and her cubs. Out came the cubs, then out came the pi$$ed sow. He was expecting to find a coyote and was only armed with a single shot.410. She charged and he put that one shell of bird shot in her nose. Just a couple of pellets wangled up into her brain and dropped her at his feet. Somebody was watching over him too. :)
 
It's probably a good thing that the bear ran away instead of getting mad and charging. I'm sure it would have still had enough left in it's tank to do a good bit of damage.
 
I used to skydive and remember well a fully documented case of a woman who had a total mal and augered in but lived.

It is possible....................but I don't want to try it. Putting your faith in a .22 against a bear is just as wise as expecting to auger in and live.

It is possible.
 
Uncharacteristically, the bear returned Sunday night.

"Normally, once you run a bear off, he doesn't come back," West said.

I guess those Missouri bears are really different. Out here in Colorado, bears normally DO come back when they've found a food supply. It's a big problem.
 
The article just said a .22 caliber rifle. We all read that as a 22 long rifle but it could really be a few differnt things, maybe it was a .22 long but it could have been somthing else.
I am supprised the press didn't report it as a gang banger with an assault weapon defending his pit bull. That would have been a much better story.
 
Auger in: He means hit the ground from a great height without pulling the ripcord on her parachute. Not recommended.

As a kid (circa 1959) I read a story in Field & Stream about an old lady in Alaska (widow who continued running her late husband's trap lines) who was confronted by a Grizzly and dispatched it with 7 rds from a pump .22 LR.

If I were to go Grizzly hunting I'd want the guide right behind me with a .375> in addition to mine.
 
Check out the video available at the second link given above. That rifle's definitely a rimfire, although it may be .22 WRM instead of .22LR.
 
I've killed a cow before with a .22, but I'd want a .22WRF or even a .22 WMR for bear! :what:

Seriously, lucky guy; could have gone bad if the bear came at him.
 
Tinker - This one reminds me of that guy, while checking out what was in his henhouse, found a sow Grizly and her cubs. Out came the cubs, then out came the pi$$ed sow. He was expecting to find a coyote and was only armed with a single shot.410. She charged and he put that one shell of bird shot in her nose. Just a couple of pellets wangled up into her brain and dropped her at his feet. Somebody was watching over him too.
:what: :what: Time to change the underware! :what: :what:
 
"He had damage to his property," he said. "We're confident this wasn't a case where the bear was just ambling by and he shot it."

It sounds like Missouri has reasonable, sane, wildlife officers. Not neccessarily a given in this day and age.
 
A .22 lr can do devastating damage to a human, especially inside the ribcage or skull. It is surprising to me that a .22 would/could penetrate far enough into a bear to kill.
 
kngflp,

I can't recall exactly which of the Foxfire books it was (I think it was #5) but there was a chapter on bear hunters of Smoky's that was real interesting. The author quoted some of the old timers' stories of dropping large black bears with .22's. On purpose. I seem to recall that one of these was a large stock killer that was finally dispatched with single .22 to the head. Those are real good books. The stories of those old mountain people were real interesting.

That reminds me....I know a fellow who hunts wild hog with just a .22 pistol, for food on occasion. His name is Calvin and he's in his late 50's. He scouts them, and when one gets mad enough to charge he side steps like a matador and pops them point blank in the head. My father says this man is like the last of the type of mountain folk he used to know as a kid around here. This guy is real interesting if you hang with him. He's stays simple and is about the best woodsman I've presonally ever known. I call him Calvin "Dundee". :)
 
WOW that is crazy about the wild boar! I wasn't doubting a .22s potential out of a rifle I was just picking at the media.

The guy who taught my carry class had an officer that worked with him get shot twice in the head with a .22 pistol, both times at very close ranges both times the rounds were recovered from between his scalp and his skull never penetrating the skull.

The same cop also shot some steel plate with FMJs and caught a 230 gr ricochete to the forehead.
He ened up retireing early due to chronic headaches.
 
Uncharacteristically, the bear returned Sunday night.
Normally once you run a bear off, he usually don't come back.

What a crock. :rolleyes: Bears become habituated especially when it involves food. The only real effective way to run them off for good, is to dust their arse with a load of steel shot and keep food sources secured.
 
These sorts of threads and posts make me laugh. I don't know why people are surprised that a .22 can kill animals other than squirrels. A .22 is far from consistently effective on larger game, but the potential is most certainly there. As noted, shot placement will be critical for these results.

Also as noted, it is fortunate the bear retreated instead of charging because he probably still could do a lot of damage. While .22s can kill things like bears, short of brain and spinal cord shots, the .22 may not incapacitate the bear quickly enough.
 
Bear Loads

An old Athabaskan Indian who lived up the road (since deceased) had an encounter with 3 charging grizzlies and a 22 rifle and emerged unscathed.
He was heading to a lake in the spring with an old Winchester model 1890 pump 22 rifle to hunt muscrat when he was charged by 3 grizzlies, a mother and 2 full grown cubs almost as large as she. When the shooting was over he had all 3 bears on the ground. He then decided to retreat home and get what he called his BIG gun (a model 94 30-30 cal.). When he arrived back at the scene the mother and one cub were dead and the other cub had dragged itself off into the brush and was never found.
When asked how he was able to get all 3 down with a 22 he said he took all chest shots, frontal and then side shots when they turned.
I think a model 1890 holds 15 rounds, one of the original hi-caps.
 
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