Hunting Tips For Grizzly Hunts In Alaska

By Megan Landry


Grizzly hunts in Alaska are among the top trophy hunting thrills found in North America. Alaska is without any doubt the best place for bear hunts because 98% of brown bears in the U. S. Can be found in the state. Grizzlies are the ones which are located inland and in northern Alaska.

Before getting down to the best locations and other details for a guided hunt, it might be helpful to take a brief look at the hunting regulations. The basic requirements for non-residents include getting a license and a $25 locking tag. The tags cannot be transferred to others, and must be locked on to the hide right 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.

Many such providers arrange for stays in luxury hunting lodges. Hunters can use it as a base, and take up the chance to bag everything from brown bears/grizzlies to black bears, caribou, moose and wolves. Not to mention some freshwater fishing in between on the innumerable rivers, streams, lakes and ponds.

It's a given that the guide will be a local expert who will make sure hunters comply with the law while enjoying the thrill of bringing down powerful grizzlies. It doesn't mean visitors don't need to know what's in their own best interest. In fact, finding out a bit more about hunting units, regulatory years, hunting seasons, bag limits, etc. May help in choosing the right provider in the best possible location.

Let's consider a couple of specific examples. Kodiak, which comes within Unit 8, has a bag limit of one bear for every four regulatory years. Hunters are furthermore not allowed to shoot cubs, or any females which the cubs are following around. Denali State Park includes Unit 13-E, where hunters are limited to one bear/regulatory year. Other units, such as Unit 17 located due southwest from Anchorage, allow hunters to bag up to two bears in a regulatory year.

It goes without saying that a higher bag limit is offered only in places where the bear population is bigger. This in turn makes it easier to locate grizzlies and focus on the adrenaline rush of the kill, instead of spending a large part of the trip scouting the area in planes, outboards and snowmobiles. Even expert hunters find the going tough in the frozen tundra and the mountains, and grizzly hunts in Alaska will be a lot more successful if informed decisions are taken beforehand.




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