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FOGGY
BEAR
ON COOPER’S MOUNTAIN The spotting scope had been set up for an hour, but
for the bigger part of that hour had canted crazily to the sky while I lay back
on a moss covered bank enjoying the decidedly pleasant mid-morning Alaskan
sunshine. The sunshine was unusually welcome as only an Alaskan can testify,
because the long artic winter was over and Breakup was at hand, A warm Chinook
wind had been gently blowing since the weekend past, melting snow and ice and
breaking the grip of winter on the land. Indeed, that warm sun had instilled my
winter-chilled carcass with
enough ambition for a spring bear hunt, which
was the excuse I gave my
wife as I left with Dave Wiley for Cooper’s Mountain on the Alaska Penninsula.
I
opened a shuttered eyelid, spotting Wiley bent over the tailgate of the "Cornbinder,"
as I called my
4 x 4 International Travelall, busily doing something with
a Coleman stove which I knew would turn out delectable. I
contentedly settled back to doze,
only to jerk awake at a wild shout from the truck. Wiley was already at the
truck, putting on gear and loading his Enfield
30-06. He was a Regular Army captain, commanding the Medical Service Corps unit
for the 30th Artillery, of which I was the surgeon. We were stationed at Wiley
was already well up the track leading from the bank of Cooper's Inside
of ten minutes we were both wet to the knees from the heavy brush, and within
twenty were wet to the crotch from the hip-deep drifts of melting snow that more
resembled giant slush
cones than snowbanks. There wasn't a spot of dry ground on the whole hillside.
Water was ankle
deep where we stepped and deeper if we weren't careful about where we put a
foot. And the higher we went, the deeper
and more frequent the drifts
became. Needless
to say, our progress was slow and
painful. After mushing up the slope for an hour, we spotted
the bear
again, surprisingly in about the same place
that we'd seen him before.
We were nearly at the timber line
by then, and were running out of cover. Worse, the weather had deteriorated, with a sharp wind and
scudding clouds that conglomerated
over the next hour, covering the once blue sky with a solid gray Alaskan overcast. Now
we were cold as well as wet, and the climbing was getting tougher. We
would climb over some of the drifts, but others would cave in under us,
floundering us in hip deep piles of icy slush from which we would then have to wade or climb, only to fall
in again at the next step. "I'm as ready as you are," I answered,
knowing full well that
he was just as tired and cold as 1 was, but not ready to admit it. And I
wasn’t about to admit that
I could take less than he could. "Toss
you for the shot?" he queried mischieviously, dragging a quarter out
of his pocket. 1 knew he'd brought it along purposefully to challenge me with.
He threw it in the air. "Heads," I said, "and go jump in
Cooper's Wiley groaned aloud in mock anguish. "Heads it
is. Guess the first shot is yours. So's the decision to tackle that hill. You
want that first shot bad enough to do it?" I sighed, wiggling my soaked fanny in the slushy
snowbank I was sitting on. I couldn't have been any wetter and had sat down.
"Yes," I decided, "let's take the chance. We're close enough to
the top now that we might be able to see him from up there." Wiley
struggled to his feet and I followed, adjusting my pack as we slopped along,
feet squishing in the water and slush underfoot.
The lower slopes had been covered with grass under the
snow, but the snow-slick grass was now changing to tundra, which was much easier
to walk in. We sank up to our ankles with each step but it Wiley huffed to stop and collapsed on the tundra. I cast a
wary glance all around but could see nothing except gray cloud. We had seen a
huge sow Brown bear on this mountain in the past and knew we could run into her
anytime. This high, the fog even blanked out Cooper's Wiley spoke in a whisper, "Wonder where that bear
is?" He rolled over on his belly so he could watch the slopes immediately
above us. "He ought to be around somewhere close. He was moving this
direction, so let's move up into the rocks and sit. Maybe he'll walk into
us." I nodded in assent, and we struck out up the hill
towards some rocky cliffs we had seen earlier. We figured that his den would be
close and we would be in a position to intercept him when he returned. A
little breeze sprang up, scudding the heavy mist from the direction the
bear presumably would come from. "Good thing," I thought, "or the
bear would get our scent for sure." I was climbing quietly, trying not to
make much noise in the sloppy tundra. It was tiring work and my thighs were
burning with the fire of overexertion. I suddenly realized that Wiley had
disappeared. I glanced to the left only to find him on his belly in the tundra,
attention riveted up-slope and hands fumbling with his '06.
The bear collapsed and came thumping down the steep
slope. I found myself half-standing, left hammer cocked and sights on the black
form as it rolled to a stop about 15 feet away. "I don't think you need a follow-up shot,"
commented a wry voice behind me," That big bullet took him square through
the shoulder and chest. He didn't even know what hit him." And so it appeared. The big 365 grain hollow point had
broken the bear
down with a hit in the shoulder joint, then had penetrated the chest, rupturing
the lungs and great vessels of the heart before exiting behind the up-slope
shoulder. It had obviously been a quick and merciful kill. I flopped down by the bear while Wiley quickly snapped
some pictures,
then we skinned the animal, taking the paws and head intact. We would carefully
skin them out later when there was more time and comfort. We found the bear to be a barren sow, about three
years old, thin and skinny from her winter's denning, but with a thick, black
glossy coat. We didn't forget to harvest the filet, backstrap and hindquarters,
knowing that they would be tasty eating after a winter's tenderizing inactivity. As we were stumbling down the hill, wet, cold, tired
and with a long hike ahead of us, Wiley asked, "Hey White, you ready to
come back next week-end for my bear?" "Not in the middle of Breakup, you lummox,"
I answered. "It's going to take all summer to warm up after this hike.
You're a glutton for punishment, that's for sure." "So are you, friend," he said, chuckling as
he waded into a fresh snowbank. "See you up here next week."
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