Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches.

Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches.
he will often rise up in this fashion and strike a single blow.  He will also rise in clinching with a man on horseback.  In 1882 a mounted Indian was killed in this manner on one of the river bottoms some miles below where my ranch house now stands, not far from the junction of the Beaver and Little Missouri.  The bear had been hunted into a thicket by a band of Indians, in whose company my informant, a white squaw-man, with whom I afterward did some trading, was travelling.  One of them in the excitement of the pursuit rode across the end of the thicket; as he did so the great beast sprang at him with wonderful quickness, rising on its hind legs, and knocking over the horse and rider with a single sweep of its terrible fore-paws.  It then turned on the fallen man and tore him open, and though the other Indians came promptly to his rescue and slew his assailant, they were not in time to save their comrade’s life.

A bear is apt to rely mainly on his teeth or claws according to whether his efforts are directed primarily to killing his foe or to making good his own escape.  In the latter event he trusts chiefly to his claws.  If cornered, he of course makes a rush for freedom, and in that case he downs any man who is in his way with a sweep of his great paw, but passes on without stopping to bite him.  If while sleeping or resting in thick brush some one suddenly stumbles on him close up he pursues the same course, less from anger than from fear, being surprised and startled.  Moreover, if attacked at close quarters by men and dogs he strikes right and left in defence.

Sometimes what is called a charge is rather an effort to get away.  In localities where he has been hunted, a bear, like every other kind of game, is always on the look-out for an attack, and is prepared at any moment for immediate flight.  He seems ever to have in his mind, whether feeding, sunning himself, or merely roaming around, the direction—­usually towards the thickest cover or most broken ground—­in which he intends to run if molested.  When shot at he instantly starts towards this place; or he may be so confused that he simply runs he knows not whither; and in either event he may take a line that leads almost directly to or by the hunter, although he had at first no thought of charging.  In such a case he usually strikes a single knock-down blow and gallops on without halting, though that one blow may have taken life.  If the claws are long and fairly sharp (as in early spring, or even in the fall, if the animal has been working over soft ground) they add immensely to the effect of the blow, for they cut like blunt axes.  Often, however, late in the season, and if the ground has been dry and hard, or rocky, the claws are worn down nearly to the quick, and the blow is then given mainly with the under side of the paw; although even under this disadvantage a thump from a big bear will down a horse or smash in a man’s breast.  The hunter Hofer once lost a horse in this manner.  He shot at and wounded a bear which rushed off, as ill luck would have it, past the place where his horse was picketed; probably more in fright than in anger it struck the poor beast a blow which, in the end, proved mortal.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.