a mighty big bear in Duluth

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MNTonester
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Location: Duluth, MN

a mighty big bear in Duluth

Post by MNTonester » Thu Oct 19, 2017 5:37 pm

The Orange Street the article references is my neighborhood. This bear challenged my neighbor across the street, tore down one of his apple trees and twice destroyed another neighbor's garaged door when breaking in.

Bear trapped in Duluth tips scale at 605 pounds
By Sam Cook on Oct 15, 2017 at 6:00 a.m.

DULUTH — Stone Boulanger of Stone River Wildlife Control says it was the largest nuisance bear he's ever trapped for a homeowner. He trapped the bear last Monday evening, Oct. 9, at a residence in the Duluth Heights neighborhood, he said, where it had been causing repeated damage to the home.

The bear weighed 605 pounds field-dressed.

That's a whopping big black bear.

"I've never seen anything bigger than this," said Boulanger, whose business is based in Carlton. "A big bear is 300. This is just phenomenal."

Boulanger found someone who was willing to use the meat from the bear, which was captured in a live trap. He took it to a remote location and killed it. The bear was processed by Rob Parrott of Bear's Den Wild Game Processing in Saginaw.

"I've been guiding bear hunts and processing wild game since 1984, and I've never seen anything like this," Parrott said.

John Chalstrom of Chalstrom's Bait and Tackle north of Duluth also processes wild game.

"Of all the years I've been monkeying with bears, I've never seen anything bigger," Chalstrom said. "I've had a couple in the mid-550s in my whole lifetime here. Our old scale goes to 600 pounds. We had one that bent the scale at 585. That's the biggest bear I've ever had here."

Both the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and the Duluth Police Department authorized the live-trapping of the bear, Boulanger said.

The bear had been trying to break into the homeowner's house during the evenings, Boulanger said.

"It broke through a door in the residence," Boulanger said, "and was breaking some glass. One time, it broke out the glass and stuck its head in the door. When (the homeowner) hit it over the head with a frying pan, it took a swipe but hit the outside wall."

He said he believes it might be the same bear that broke through two garage doors on Orange Street last year, about a half-mile from where Boulanger trapped it this year.

A live trap, mounted on a trailer, is made from a steel culvert 8 feet long and 4 feet in diameter, Boulanger said. Boulanger had placed a bucket of sunflower seeds and doughnuts at the far end of the trap.

"The bear is supposed to crawl in, and as soon as they put any weight on the pail, the door is spring-loaded and it slams shut behind the bear," he said.

That failed the first time.

"The bear was so long that its back was still sticking out of the back end of the trap," Boulanger said. "He slid out and got away."

Two nights later — this past Monday — Boulanger made the food harder to get, and the bear was successfully trapped.

The homeowners were "ecstatic," Boulanger said.

"They had a good sleep that night," he said. "The bear had been coming around from about 10 to midnight. They were pretty paranoid of it."

He estimated the live weight of the bear at about 665 pounds.

After being field-dressed, the bear was taken to Bear's Den, where it was weighed at 605 pounds, Parrott said. The bear was ready for winter.

"I took off 160 pounds of fat," Parrott said. "I'll bet the fat was 4½ or 5 inches thick on its back. It was incredible."

Parrott also said that in processing the bear, he found "tons of lead shot in the hind (end)" and a rifle slug lodged in the tenderloin.

"He must have been a nuisance for some time," Parrott said.

The bear had one thing in its favor in being able to grow so large, Boulanger said.

"He's just a city bear," Boulanger said. "And there's no bear hunting in the city. They just grow up and get big. If they're not hit by a car, they just keep growing."

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