tropicsteve
New member



actually, quite bearable. my brother lives in the mountains of West "By God" Virginia and often has visitors to a couple of apple trees on his land by his home.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Bears are a real "nuisance" here in Wisconsin because of their effect on the white-tail deer population and the associated gun and archery hunters who are complaining that they are seeing less-and-less deer in the woods and more-and-more black bear. Part of the "problem" is man-made on two fronts:
1) Feeding of white tail deer and birds by hunters and Northwood inhabitants (Bear eat shelled corn, bird seed, and apples, too). Bear have become "brave" and do not fear man-inhabited areas if there is easy food. Ask those inhabitants who have had their bird feeder ransacked by bears; its not pretty!!!.
Many deer hunters complain that bear and the ever-increasing re-introduced wolf populations are eating fawns when they are born in late May, reducing deer herd sizes. While I myself am not a hunter, I can attest to the fact that there are, indeed, less deer sightings in the Northwoods. One positive, though, is that there are also less deer-auto collisions, BUT this is disputed by the insurance industry as there are more vehicles on the road than ever before, so deer-vehicle collisions are increasing (which may be true! As they say in Wisconsin (to paraphrase a saying about Indy 500 drivers hitting the wall at the fabled raceway), "There are two types of drivers in Wisconsin: Those who have hit deer and those who are going to hit deer!" The early to mid November rut requires extreme driver-vigilance to travel via a vehicle in ANY part of wooded Wisconsin, especially during full-moon nights!)
2) Not enough bear hunters to control the bear population. It takes a big investment in bear-hunting dogs and time to train dogs them properly. PLUS the cost of a bear hunting permit from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (W-DNR) and the baiting-restrictions for bear (No honey or peanut butter) make it economically feasible for only the most-dedicated and ardent bear-hunting sportspeople via gun or bow.
So while bears look "cute" to tourist and seasonal Northwoods visitors, they pose bigger problems to local inhabitants and deer hunters.
No, you`ve had Bears for quite some time in Northern Illinois, and they STILL cannot play good football!! At least the other Bear-related team (Cubs) is doing "better".we`ve actually had a couple of black bears in Northern Illinois in the past year
No, you`ve had Bears for quite some time in Northern Illinois, and they STILL cannot play good football!! At least the other Bear-related team (Cubs) is doing "better".