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The color of the fur can
vary considerably with the Grizzly Bear.
They will range in color from the dark
chocolate to the very blond. Two or three
cubs in one family will often have different
colored hides. One color phase found here is
the very desirable Tolklat Grizzly. This
color phase begins with very dark chocolate
legs and gradually lightens to a blond color
on the back with light silver tips on the
fur. A mature Tolklat Grizzly makes an
outstanding rug mount.
The interior Grizzly is well muscled with a
prominent shoulder hump. They are capable of
short bursts of speed that can and often do
bring down Moose and Caribou. They have long
claws that are used for digging out ground
squirrels and excavating dens. When one
comes across the remains of a Moose or
Caribou kill that has been buried by the
Grizzly Bear it can make the hair stand up
on the back of your neck. It looks like a
bull dozer has moved half an acre of sod and
piled it six feet high over the kill.

Grizzlies are crafty and cunning and seldom
seen by people in their natural environment.
They are elusive and normally range about
during the night. However, all Bears are
gluttons and this trait brings about the
seasonal situation that allows the hunter a
chance to take an
 incredible trophy.
When
the Salmon spawn and the Blue Berries ripen
Grizzlies lose their natural shyness and
venture out onto the Salmon streams and the
Blue Berry patches in good numbers during
the day light hours. Hunting is still best
during the early mornings and late evenings
but Bears can be seen through out the entire
day as they feed.
Hunting is done in several ways in the
Spring. During the month of April Grizzlies
will emerge from their winter hibernation.
They spend five full months in their dens
and can be hunted for several days as they
lounge about the den's entrance. They make
daily forages in search of food and to
toughen up the tender pads on the underside
of their paws. Once they leave the dens they
are generally taken off of a Moose carcass
that was either winter killed or freshly
hunted. This is the time of the year that
Moose and Caribou are the most vulnerable to
Bear predation. Deep snows hinder the Moose
and Caribou while the Grizzlies seem to be
able to power right through it. Travel
during this time of year is by super cub and
by snow machine. Walking is done with the
use of snow shoes.

Several methods are used to hunt Grizzly
Bear in the Fall. When the season opens, on
August
10th, the Grizzlies are fishing on
the rivers. This is a good time to use a
boat to drift past good
fishing holes and to
make stands at the entrances of streams that
hold spawning Salmon. During these hunts a
mobile camp is used, but a camp that is more
substantial and comfortable than the light
fly camps used for hunting Sheep. In mid
August the Bears will begin to migrate up
off of the Salmon streams onto the mountain
sides in search of Blue Berries and Parka
Squirrels. Horses are then used and hunting
is done from the main Lodge or
small
comfortable log cabins. Good binoculars are
a necessity since much of the day is spent
glassing the surrounding hillsides from a
favorite high ground look out. When a good
trophy is spotted the horses are used to get
into position and the final stalk made on
foot. When the hunter has taken a Moose or
Caribou trophy a good method of hunting is
to set up a blind and wait for a Grizzly to
begin feeding on the remains of the kill.
During the first week of September the Fall
colors are spectacular. This is the perfect
time for the hunter that wants to hunt in a
more relaxed atmosphere, have the amenities
provided by the main Lodge, and yet have a
very high level of success.
The Grizzly Bear is an outstanding trophy
animal. Combine that with a stalk in the
majestic scenic setting of the Rainy Pass
area and the hunter will have an adventure
that most sportsmen only dream about.
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