90 Hunting the Grisly 



spend two or three hours sitting still and look 

 ing over a vast tract of country before he will 

 suddenly spy a bear; or he may see nothing 

 after the most careful search in a given place, 

 and must then go on half a dozen miles to an 

 other, watching warily as he walks, and con 

 tinuing this possibly for several days before 

 getting a glimpse of his game. If the bear 

 are digging roots, or otherwise procuring their 

 food on the bare hill sides and table-lands, it 

 is of course comparatively easy to see them; 

 and it is under such circumstances that this 

 kind of hunting is most successful. Once seen, 

 the actual stalk may take two or three hours, 

 the nature of the ground and the direction of 

 the wind often necessitating a long circuit; 

 perhaps a gully, a rock, or a fallen log offers 

 a chance for an approach to within two hun 

 dred yards, and although the hunter will, if 

 possible, get much closer than this, yet even 

 at such a distance a bear is a large enough 

 mark to warrant risking a shot. 



Usually the berry grounds do not offer such 

 favorable opportunities, as they often lie in 

 thick timber, or are covered so densely with 

 bushes as to obstruct the view: and they are 

 rarely commanded by a favorable spot from 

 which to spy. On the other hand, as already 



