Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.

Felis Concolor cuoged it

124

Comments

  • backthepack
    backthepack Member Posts: 19,942
    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    He is lucky it was just a little squirt. I work with CPW predator staff. Some of the big males they've collared are 2 hundo. In that region as well.

    I’m never hiking horsetooth again...
    You'd only have to worry about an old, sick, or injured cat. If you see one, it's because he/she wanted you to see them. Dogs often miss scent as they are watching from above.

    Travel in pairs and carry bear spray (yes, bear spray) and a good knife on your hip or inner thigh. Not in your backpack or faggy fanny-pack millenial cellphone shit.Make lots of noise. Announce your presence around blind corners.


    We've got NPs and NFs in MT, WY and Alaska we cannot carry firearms to collect remote sensing data. "Minimum tool" analysis bologna.

    Bear spray is deadly effective on wolves, bears and cats.

    They go right to panic mode and bolt.

    The sound of a gunshot alone can often turn a predator into kill/fight mode. When you hit them and don't kill them, it is worse. Seen it first hand with partially trapped or maimed bears.

    Many large northern predators know a gunshot means a dinner bell. You may bring in more trouble to your camp the next day....even if you scared off your initial nuisance target.








    Yeah, I’ll just stick with skiing and running in town...
  • MisterEm
    MisterEm Member Posts: 6,685
    edited February 2019

    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    He is lucky it was just a little squirt. I work with CPW predator staff. Some of the big males they've collared are 2 hundo. In that region as well.

    I’m never hiking horsetooth again...
    You'd only have to worry about an old, sick, or injured cat. If you see one, it's because he/she wanted you to see them. Dogs often miss scent as they are watching from above.

    Travel in pairs and carry bear spray (yes, bear spray) and a good knife on your hip or inner thigh. Not in your backpack or faggy fanny-pack millenial cellphone shit.Make lots of noise. Announce your presence around blind corners.


    We've got NPs and NFs in MT, WY and Alaska we cannot carry firearms to collect remote sensing data. "Minimum tool" analysis bologna.

    Bear spray is deadly effective on wolves, bears and cats.

    They go right to panic mode and bolt.

    The sound of a gunshot alone can often turn a predator into kill/fight mode. When you hit them and don't kill them, it is worse. Seen it first hand with partially trapped or maimed bears.

    Many large northern predators know a gunshot means a dinner bell. You may bring in more trouble to your camp the next day....even if you scared off your initial nuisance target.








    Yeah, I’ll just stick with skiing and running in town...
    Colorado is mild. CPW has been paying a team of mercenaries to keep all predators down (cats, coyotes, black and griz) for decades. There are two populations of isolated griz here CPW is forbidden to discuss....

    This is just so out of state noobs can pop a giant 5x5 lawn elk 50 yards from the ATV trails. Many of these bucks were eating fresh sod on front lawns the previous spring in Estes Park.

    I'd be more worried around ellensburg and north of Colville. Huge cats (nearing 3 hundo), wolf packs and the red man will get you before any Boulder hippy mini-cat will.

    EDIT: WDFW will laugh at you if a bear/cat/wolf disturb your camp and you call in (see pic). CPW will be forced to remove it.

    PNW style "Kitty"


  • HillsboroDuck
    HillsboroDuck Member Posts: 9,186
    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    He is lucky it was just a little squirt. I work with CPW predator staff. Some of the big males they've collared are 2 hundo. In that region as well.

    I’m never hiking horsetooth again...
    You'd only have to worry about an old, sick, or injured cat. If you see one, it's because he/she wanted you to see them. Dogs often miss scent as they are watching from above.

    Travel in pairs and carry bear spray (yes, bear spray) and a good knife on your hip or inner thigh. Not in your backpack or faggy fanny-pack millenial cellphone shit.Make lots of noise. Announce your presence around blind corners.


    We've got NPs and NFs in MT, WY and Alaska we cannot carry firearms to collect remote sensing data. "Minimum tool" analysis bologna.

    Bear spray is deadly effective on wolves, bears and cats.

    They go right to panic mode and bolt.

    The sound of a gunshot alone can often turn a predator into kill/fight mode. When you hit them and don't kill them, it is worse. Seen it first hand with partially trapped or maimed bears.

    Many large northern predators know a gunshot means a dinner bell. You may bring in more trouble to your camp the next day....even if you scared off your initial nuisance target.








    Yeah, I’ll just stick with skiing and running in town...
    Colorado is mild. CPW has been paying a team of mercenaries to keep all predators down (cats, coyotes, black and griz) for decades. There are two populations of isolated griz here CPW is forbidden to discuss....

    This is just so out of state noobs can pop a giant 5x5 lawn elk 50 yards from the ATV trails. Many of these bucks were eating fresh sod on front lawns the previous spring in Estes Park.

    I'd be more worried around ellensburg and north of Colville. Huge cats (bearing 3 hundo), wolf packs and the red man will get you before any Boulder hippy mini-cat will.

    EDIT: WDFW will laugh at you if a bear/cat/wolf disturb your camp and you call in. CPW will be forced to remove it.
    isafnrc
  • backthepack
    backthepack Member Posts: 19,942
    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    He is lucky it was just a little squirt. I work with CPW predator staff. Some of the big males they've collared are 2 hundo. In that region as well.

    I’m never hiking horsetooth again...
    You'd only have to worry about an old, sick, or injured cat. If you see one, it's because he/she wanted you to see them. Dogs often miss scent as they are watching from above.

    Travel in pairs and carry bear spray (yes, bear spray) and a good knife on your hip or inner thigh. Not in your backpack or faggy fanny-pack millenial cellphone shit.Make lots of noise. Announce your presence around blind corners.


    We've got NPs and NFs in MT, WY and Alaska we cannot carry firearms to collect remote sensing data. "Minimum tool" analysis bologna.

    Bear spray is deadly effective on wolves, bears and cats.

    They go right to panic mode and bolt.

    The sound of a gunshot alone can often turn a predator into kill/fight mode. When you hit them and don't kill them, it is worse. Seen it first hand with partially trapped or maimed bears.

    Many large northern predators know a gunshot means a dinner bell. You may bring in more trouble to your camp the next day....even if you scared off your initial nuisance target.








    Yeah, I’ll just stick with skiing and running in town...
    Colorado is mild. CPW has been paying a team of mercenaries to keep all predators down (cats, coyotes, black and griz) for decades. There are two populations of isolated griz here CPW is forbidden to discuss....

    This is just so out of state noobs can pop a giant 5x5 lawn elk 50 yards from the ATV trails. Many of these bucks were eating fresh sod on front lawns the previous spring in Estes Park.

    I'd be more worried around ellensburg and north of Colville. Huge cats (nearing 3 hundo), wolf packs and the red man will get you before any Boulder hippy mini-cat will.

    EDIT: WDFW will laugh at you if a bear/cat/wolf disturb your camp and you call in. CPW will be forced to remove it.
    My friend who goes to Central had a big car encounter not too long ago. Said it was a smaller one though.
  • backthepack
    backthepack Member Posts: 19,942
    Where are the griz in CO?
  • HillsboroDuck
    HillsboroDuck Member Posts: 9,186

    Where are the griz in CO?

    If he told you he'd have to maul you.
  • MisterEm
    MisterEm Member Posts: 6,685
    edited February 2019

    Where are the griz in CO?

    Get a Wam badge and then pop off.

    (Same spot the last extant moose pop calves)
  • backthepack
    backthepack Member Posts: 19,942
    MisterEm said:

    Where are the griz in CO?

    Get a Wam badge and then pop off.

    (Same spot the last extant moose pop calves)
    I’m pour
  • 1to392831weretaken
    1to392831weretaken Member Posts: 7,696

    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    MisterEm said:

    He is lucky it was just a little squirt. I work with CPW predator staff. Some of the big males they've collared are 2 hundo. In that region as well.

    I’m never hiking horsetooth again...
    You'd only have to worry about an old, sick, or injured cat. If you see one, it's because he/she wanted you to see them. Dogs often miss scent as they are watching from above.

    Travel in pairs and carry bear spray (yes, bear spray) and a good knife on your hip or inner thigh. Not in your backpack or faggy fanny-pack millenial cellphone shit.Make lots of noise. Announce your presence around blind corners.


    We've got NPs and NFs in MT, WY and Alaska we cannot carry firearms to collect remote sensing data. "Minimum tool" analysis bologna.

    Bear spray is deadly effective on wolves, bears and cats.

    They go right to panic mode and bolt.

    The sound of a gunshot alone can often turn a predator into kill/fight mode. When you hit them and don't kill them, it is worse. Seen it first hand with partially trapped or maimed bears.

    Many large northern predators know a gunshot means a dinner bell. You may bring in more trouble to your camp the next day....even if you scared off your initial nuisance target.








    Yeah, I’ll just stick with skiing and running in town...
    Colorado is mild. CPW has been paying a team of mercenaries to keep all predators down (cats, coyotes, black and griz) for decades. There are two populations of isolated griz here CPW is forbidden to discuss....

    This is just so out of state noobs can pop a giant 5x5 lawn elk 50 yards from the ATV trails. Many of these bucks were eating fresh sod on front lawns the previous spring in Estes Park.

    I'd be more worried around ellensburg and north of Colville. Huge cats (nearing 3 hundo), wolf packs and the red man will get you before any Boulder hippy mini-cat will.

    EDIT: WDFW will laugh at you if a bear/cat/wolf disturb your camp and you call in. CPW will be forced to remove it.
    My friend who goes to Central had a big car encounter not too long ago. Said it was a smaller one though.
    What, like an old Lincoln Town Car? Or are we talking stretch limo?