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Grizzly Hunts In Alaska Guide For Non-Residents

By Megan Landry


For non-resident hunters, grizzly hunts in Alaska offer one of the most thrilling trophy hunting adventures possible in North America. It's the best place for hunting bears because the state has 98 percent of the U. S. Population of brown bears. The ones found inland and in the northern part of the state are grizzlies.

Before getting into locations and guided hunting trip providers, it may be helpful to take a look at state regulations. In addition to the usual hunting license, everyone is also required to get locking tags priced at $25 each. Each tag is assigned to a specific person, and cannot be transferred to someone else. It must be locked to the bear's hide immediately after the kill.

Tags have to stay on the hides until they are processed or exported. Motorized vehicles can serve as transportation while locating bears, but must not be used for chasing a fleeing bear or herding them towards other hunters. All brown bears and grizzlies are subject to sealing requirements, which means reporting the kill with supporting evidence to a sealing officer within 30 days.

Non-residents don't have much to worry about because it's not possible to go on unguided grizzly hunts in Alaska. A resident friend or relative must be taken along, or it can be a guided hunt organized by a professional hunting trip provider who also takes care of all the paperwork and logistics. They also know how to locate grizzlies in the enormous vastness of the Alaskan mountains and tundra.

Some of these companies put up guests in a luxury hunting lodge. Hunters can use the lodge as a base for multiple expeditions to bag brown bears and grizzlies, black bears, moose, caribou and wolf. The freshwater fishing is just as good, and any spare time can be spent angling at any of the thousands of spots on ponds, streams, lakes and rivers.

No doubt the guide and the company handling all the details will do a good job and provide a thrilling but safe experience in compliance of state regulations. Even so, hunters should still take some time to learn about things such as hunting seasons, regulatory years, hunting units, and the bag limits in each unit. It will help choose the right provider and guide in an ideal location.

For instance, Kodiak comes under Unit 8, where hunters have a bag limit of one bear every four regulatory years. Cubs and females with cubs cannot be shot at all in Kodiak. Unit 13-E is inside Denali State Park, where there is a bag limit of one bear per regulatory year. Many other units such as Unit 17 southwest of Anchorage have bag limits of two bears in each regulatory year.

The units with higher bag limits obviously have bigger bear populations. For the hunter, it means more time spent enjoying the thrill of the hunt and less time moving around on boats, snowmobiles and planes looking for a bear. This is the kind of planning and advance preparation that can make grizzly hunts in Alaska a rousing success.




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