Bear activity on my MA camera traps picked up last week. Mating season is just beginning. The cover pic is a young bear that regularly uses this area, The SD card check yesterday also showed a large boar in the area , After seeing the more frequent visits from the boar I did some checking in the area and located what appears to be a " Bear Stomp Trail" and an old " Bear Scent Marking Tree", Bear Scent Marking Tree
Sunday, May 12, 2024
Sunday, May 5, 2024
MA Bear Babysitting Tree
It has been an eventful week hiking
in Massachusetts woods. While bushwhacking a new area and reaching the top of small
knoll, sixty yards away in a white pine two yearling cubs clung to the side of a
tree watching me. I stopped and thought , if the cubs are in the tree ,where is
the sow? It was just a few seconds before both cubs slid down the tree and all
three bears ran in the opposite direction. That is a first for me! My biggest
concern while bushwhacking is wandering between a sow and her cubs, fortunately
a good outcome with this encounter. I carry bear spray on the outside of my pack
and started to reach for it when seeing the cubs. I reminisced for a moment
before veering off in the other direction. It was only a short distance before
coming upon an area scattered with bear scat. Closer investigation revealed a “
Bear Babysitting Tree”. This consisted of a day bed at the base of a white pine
tree. Broke away bark showed where the bears had been climbing the tree. A short
distance away there was a skunk cabbage patch where the family of bears have
been feeding. The sow will send her cubs up the tree while she wanders foraging.
I will
make it a point to stay clear of this area while the bears find refuge.
Finally, a camera trap
videoed the first bear cubs of the year. Video Below.
Jim
Saturday, April 27, 2024
MA Bears On The Move !
Last week
was a big week for bears. Two of the new locations were active. The new scent
tree location had two visits from bears and two sows with yearling cubs were
videoed in the area. The second new location had the “ biggest bear” to date pass
by a camera trap.(cover photo). This bear is beautiful and what a “ blocky head.”
Haven’t videoed and sows with new cubs yet. Should be soon !
I spent a
morning sitting with my camera watching a breached beaver pond. It was actually
very quiet with no wildlife seen. I hope
to get back there next week. Before leaving , I set a camera trap watching the exposed
beaver lodge.
Another
secluded beaver pond has had a small bear visiting it on a weekly basis.
Jim
Saturday, April 20, 2024
Pond Watch With My Camera
I changed
the pace a bit last week and sat with my camera watching a beaver pond. This pond’s
beaver dam breached early April. Last Sunday pre-scouting the small pond , its water
level was down considerably exposing the shoreline. The beaver pond is small (
225 Yds long x 90 Yds wide). My sitting spot has ideal lighting with the sun
behind me while watching the west side of the pond . The first morning was
eventful. A lone beaver patrolled the pond at dawn stopping to eat, chewing the
bark off small branches. It was not long before it caught my scent and gave me
the tail slap on the water. I was trying to avoid this because no doubt the
tail slapping alerts wildlife to danger. All went quiet for about an hour or so,
while watching the distant shoreline a small bear appeared out of nowhere,
heading towards the beaver lodge. I was able to get a decent picture before it
disappeared into the wood line. I am going to spend a few mornings there next
week.
Checking SD cards at a different location, the
stream log trail camera set captured a good video of a “ Flying Bobcat.” This
is a pic grab from the video
This morning,
I checked the new bear scent post tree I shared with you in last week’s blog. Surprisingly,
no bears passed by the scent tree. Hopefully, something with the next SD card
check.
Jim
Friday, April 12, 2024
Big Bear Only In Cover of Darkness
Massachusetts fisher scent post
activity has slowed down in April. In this video I have summarized this year’s Fisher highlights. Included
are several fisher behaviors that were learned by me camera trapping. Last
winter tracking a fisher, two active scent posts were located sixty feet apart.
I identified them as a “ Primary” & “Secondary “ scent post. I didn’t
think the two scent posts being in such close proximity of each other would stay
active. The graphs at the end of the video show the activity.
It has been
another good week hiking in the Massachusetts woods. While kneeling to change
out SD cards , I looked across the small beaver pond and a bear was foraging
along the shoreline. I tried to video it with my GoPro camera, but it was to
far away. It was interesting watching the bear as it foraged for food, then
stopping dead in its tracks when locating a bear scent tree. It stood up , turned
with its back against the tree and started doing what I call the “ The Bear Jig.”
This consists of deep knee bends and rubbing its back up and down the tree. It
did this for three or four minutes, then laying at the base of the tree. I
guess this might have been to rest after the vigorous rubbing activity. After a
few minutes’ resting, the bear moved on as it continued to search for food. Watching
the bear scent marking was interesting and the bear identified a scent marking
tree. A trail camera was set and hopefully more bears will leave there scent
travelling through the area. Stay tuned.
Fisher scent
post activity has slowed down; however, a male fisher has freshened the scent
post twice in April. I’ll leave TC’s for the month.
Bear
activity continues to increase. The first sow of the Spring with three yearlings
passed by a camera trap in the cover of darkness. The video is what I call an
evidence vid, it’s low light and doesn’t make for a good show and tell.
The biggest
bear so far this year ( cover pic) has triggered the same trail camera five
times over three weeks. All have been at night. It’s a beautiful big bear, I hope
I’m lucky enough to have him pass the TC during the day.
I did get
out in my kayak this week with a camera in hopes to get a few pics of migratory
ducks. Nothing yet !
Jim
Thursday, April 4, 2024
Bear # 4 - So Early in The Spring
An eventful
week to say the least! It started while hiking back to an area that has shown considerable
bear sign this Spring. Enough so, that additional trail cameras were packed in.
Bushwhacking along, I watched a distant moose canter along the open hardwoods. Certainly,
a wonderful way to start the morning. Reaching the area with all the bear
activity and kneeling to set up the first trail camera . I felt like I was
being watched. Looking up , their stood a moose, thirty yards away, staring at
me! Neat and a bit concerning. I stood up, took a few steps, and the moose went
on its way. A few minutes later I looked behind me and there stood the moose
watching me again. I was glad it didn’t keep following me. Continuing along the
swamp edge, movement eighty yards or so out caught my eye. A bear was foraging, it wasn’t long before the
light breeze carried my scent and the bear vanished into the swamp. Two more TC’s
were set, and it was time to head out. Reaching a cart road and rounding the
corner, a second bear of the morning walked slowly away from me. I watched it
for a minute or so before it wandered into a thick area heading towards a hardwood
ridge.
Also, this
week ,I went to pull the two Fisher scent post trail cameras and was surprised
to see that both a male and female had freshened the scent post. I figured
scent post marking was over, given it has been sixteen days since the prior scent post visit. Last year, activity stopped on
March 17th. It will be interesting to see when activity stops this year.
Late Wednesday
( before Thursday snow) bushwhacking to check trail cameras, a second deer antler
was found. This one is unique (pic). It appears to have shed the winter of
2023. It was still in decent shape, with only a few chew marks from mice.
So, all and all,
it was an eventful week in the woods.
With lots of
effort and even more luck, my Browning
Elite HP4 trail camera (Massachusetts) won the 2024 Trailcampro Video
Contest. The contest rules were unique animal behavior and video quality. Who
would ever believe a bear would behave as this one did in front of a trail camera?
https://youtu.be/lsEZ-n4Zt-M
The cover
picture bear is the forth different bear. The 2024 bear activity is starting out
strong. In early April Sow’s with yearlings should start showing up on trail
cameras then late April early May Sow’s with COY.
Jim
Friday, March 29, 2024
More and More Bears Showing UP On TCs
Last week
after watching two otters preen and rub their scent on top of grass hummocks, I
repositioned the trail camera just in case they returned. My efforts paid off with
two minutes of wonderful otter footage. I included a snip below.
The cover
pic is a young bull. I’m surprised to see he still has his antlers this late in
March.
I’ll be
pulling the Fisher sets this weekend. Scent post activity has stopped. A female
really worked her scent back in mid-March I thought for sure a male would have
responded to her last scent post coverage.
A hike this
week to check the ledge camera trap sets turned out to be quite an eventful trip.
The SD cards had two bobcats passing an opening that possibly could become a den site. Or
at least that’s what I thought until I saw bear footage. Not that a bear would
be out of the question in this spot, I just didn’t think I would ever capture a
bear along this ledge transition line.
Camera traps
also videoed deer mice , chipmunks, and several gray squirrels. A paradise for
a bobcat.
Jim