Father and son bag bear and cub to kick off annual New Jersey hunt
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Bummer Cronk of Oak Ridge and his son, Hunter, 12, pose with their opening-day bears. (Emma Lee/for NewsWorks)
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Bummer Cronk and his son, Hunter, arrive at the Green Pond bear check station with a double kill. (Emma Lee/for NewsWorks)
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Bummer Cronk's bear weighs in at 240.5 pounds. (Emma Lee/for NewsWorks)
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Bummer Cronk exposes the teeth on his 240-pound prize. He also reveals a tattoo inside the upper lip that shows this bear has encountered humans before. (Emma Lee/for NewsWorks)
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East Stroudsburg University graduate student Meghan Bird collects ticks from a harvested bear for her study of tick-borne illnesses. (Emma Lee/for NewsWorks)
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At Green Pond, check point workers lunch on bear meat from last year's harvest. Bear meat is fatty, something like corned beef, said one. (Emma Lee/for NewsWorks)
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Buck Holly traveled from Florida in 2013 to take part in New Jersey's 2013 bear hunt. (NewsWorks file photo)
The successful hunter has an intimate knowledge of the animals he pursues. In preparation for the New Jersey bear hunt, Oak Ridge resident Bummer Cronk and his 12-year-old son, Hunter, spent months scouting locations and looking for signs: tracks, dens, scat. They then began baiting a likely area with tasty morsels, such as doughnuts and oats, to ensure that the bears would stick around.
Their efforts were rewarded on Monday morning, the opening day of the season, when they bagged a bear each, a 240-pound adult female and her 2-year-old cub. The cub weighed in at 142 pounds, larger than some adult bears. Cronk said the bears were making a nuisance of themselves at a nearby farm, killing chickens.
Bear baiting, like the hunt itself, is controversial. Legislation introduced last month in the New Jersey Senate would ban the practice, which opponents argue causes bears to associate food with the scent of humans, encouraging bears to invade populated areas.
DEP biologist and bear project leader Kelcey Burguess said the more likely culprit is inadequately contained garbage. He thinks a ban on baiting would make the hunt too difficult. Bear hunters in New Jersey have a 5 percent success rate. About 5,800 hunters will go out for bear during the six-day season, but fewer than 300 bears will be killed.
According to Burguess, the region where the hunt takes place, north of Route 78 and west of Route 287, could sustain more than the estimated population of 2,300, but the area has reached a “cultural carrying capacity.” That is, residents are fed up with bears getting into their garbage and threatening pets and livestock. Hunting helps to keep the population in check, he said.
Hunters are required to bring their bears to one of five check points, where the DEP collects data such as weight, age and sex, and blood and tissue samples to keep track of the population.
At the Green Pond check point in Morris County, two DEP workers were joined by two volunteers and two researchers from East Stroudsburg University. Meghan Bird and her colleague Meghan Napoli collected ticks from harvested bears for a study of tick-borne illnesses. Volunteer Tom Ombrello, a Union County College biologist, served a lunch of bear meat from last year’s harvest, a dish prepared by his wife based on a recipe for pulled pork.
The group received word that protesters had been arrested at the Whittingham check point in Sussex County, but Green Pond remained quiet. State troopers maintained a watchful presence.
Cronk said he respects the opinion of those who oppose the hunt, but he doesn’t think the other side respects his point of view. For him, hunting is a tradition, passed on from father to son.
“I respect the animals,” he said. “I use it all.”
Cronk said he will eat the 50 to 60 pounds of meat he expects to recover from his kill. The skulls and hides will decorate his den. The rest will be returned to the woods, where it will be food for coyotes and other wildlife.
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