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Can't really tell unless you taste it."If future generations are to remember us with gratitude rather than contempt, we must leave them more than the miracles of technology. We must leave them a glimpse of the world as it was in the beginning, not just after we got through with it." Lyndon B. Johnson
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I had a similar question to myself last Saturday.
I came across a large white pine (10 to 12 ft. circumference) with the first limb over thirty foot up. There were claw marks up the tree as high as I could see.
So I asked myself, why would a bear climb a white pine? Then I got to thinking, maybe it was a large cat?
Any thoughts on this?
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Originally posted by Justin View PostPerhaps to escape what it perceives as danger...
Isn't it fairly common for a black bear to climb a tree if it feels threatened?
Bears also climb bear stands.
As far as what the scat is..I don't know but the scale suggests big dog.
This last weekend on Lake Superior folks were wigged out about a paw print that was some five inches across. They were convinced it was bear.
But it had only four toes. Ergo possibly Newfie.
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Originally posted by yellowcanoe View PostYep I have seen cubs up some fifty feet in white pines.
Bears also climb bear stands.
As far as what the scat is..I don't know but the scale suggests big dog.
This last weekend on Lake Superior folks were wigged out about a paw print that was some five inches across. They were convinced it was bear.
But it had only four toes. Ergo possibly Newfie.
I have a size 10 1/2 mens boot and one scat is older and white due to calcium from bone. They other is not so old and you can still see all the hair in the scat. Doubt its a dog.sigpic
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