Clarion staff photo Daniel Rosin of Soldotna shows off the brown bear he took down while bowhunting near Skikok Lake on May 6. Rosin only needed one arrow to kill the 9-foot, 750-pound bear he shot from a stand 25 feet in the air from a distance of 20 yards away.

Clarion staff photo Daniel Rosin of Soldotna shows off the brown bear he took down while bowhunting near Skikok Lake on May 6. Rosin only needed one arrow to kill the 9-foot, 750-pound bear he shot from a stand 25 feet in the air from a distance of 20 yards away.

SOHI senior bags brown bear with a bow

  • By DAN BALMER
  • Thursday, May 15, 2014 4:24pm
  • News

When big game hunting, eventually hours of silence and patience will be rewarded.

Soldotna High School senior Daniel Rosin could hardly contain his excitement after he took down a 9-foot tall brown bear with one arrow while bow hunting on May 6 near Skikok Lake.

In a stand 25 feet off the ground with his dad, Tom Rosin, the two waited a few hours before the bear presented him with the perfect shot. Enticed by popcorn, the 750-pound bear walked into the baited area about 20 yards from the stand.

Calmly and slowly, Daniel Rosin pulled back the 70-pound draw weight with 125-grain broad head and fired the arrow into the bear’s lungs, striking the heart artery. Within seconds the bear was dead.

“It was incredible. I didn’t expect it to drop like that,” he said. “My adrenaline was pumping. I could not have asked for a better result.”

Daniel Rosin, 18, built the stand with his friend River Calloway, also a SoHi senior, in a remote spot near the lake two miles off the Sterling Highway. With his friend at work he went out with his dad to hunt after dinner at about 7 p.m. Not long after they arrived, the bear looked right at them and ran off spooked, he said.

“We heard him circling around us for two hours,” Daniel Rosin said. “Then he walked up to the bait and presented the right shot. I couldn’t take my eyes off the bear, I was locked in.”

After the kill, Daniel Rosin spent another two hours skinning the bear. First he cut open the stomach and pulled the guts out. Then he cut the hide off in one piece, careful to not nick it with the knife blade.

He said the large brown bear was missing a couple claws and had worn down teeth, which showed he was an older animal. After harvesting the meat and claiming the skull and hide, he took it to Kenny Jones Skull and Bones Taxidermy in Soldotna to get a bear rug made. He said he would display the skull as a trophy.

While Daniel Rosin has hunted white-tail deer, moose, wild hogs in Texas and black bear with a rifle, the brown bear was his first kill with a bow. He said the main difference between black and brown bears are the size. Black bears eat berries and are a lot smaller while brown bears are larger and fish being their main diet.

“It means more take him down with a bow,” Daniel Rosin said. “It’s not like with a rifle where you are 200 yards off. With a bow you need to be in close range, stealthy and on the top of your game.”

Daniel Rosin has been bow hunting for about a year. He said his dad has hunted moose with a bow and taught him how to shoot with precision. Now that he has claimed his first big game with a bow, he said he is hooked on the sport.

“It is addicting,” he said. “I will never go back to using a rifle for hunting.”

Reach Dan Balmer at daniel.balmer@peninsulaclarion.com.

More in News

Upper Cook Inlet Exclusive Economic Zone can be seen on this map provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (Image via fisheries.noaa.gov)
Local meetings this week to familiarize fishers with new Cook Inlet EEZ regs

Federal management of the Cook Inlet EEZ is set to begin on May 30

The Kenai Peninsula Borough School District’s grant application for funds to support summer reading programs, along with other reading intervention documents, are splayed on a desk in the Peninsula Clarion offices on Monday, May 13, 2024 in Kenai, Alaska. (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
School district preparing for new summer reading intervention programs

Third graders who test well below benchmark on their end-of-year literacy assessment may either be held back or must receive additional intervention services

River City Academy graduates walk into Skyview Middle School’s gymnasium during their commencement ceremony on Monday near Soldotna. (Ashlyn O’Hara/Peninsula Clarion)
‘Go forth and live’

River City Academy graduates Class of 2024

Rep. Jamie Allard, R-Eagle River, and Rep. Mike Prax, R-North Pole, discuss a proposed amendment to a bill sponsored by Allard restricting transgender students’ participation in school sports during a House floor session on Thursday, May 9, 2024. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
After accusations of ‘lying’ and ‘hate’ fly, House passes bill restricting transgender students in sports

Bill passes 22-18 after filibuster by minority, but declared dead in Senate as end of session nears

Kachemak Bay Campus 2024 graduates prepare to enter commencement at the campus on May 8, 2024, in Homer, Alaska. (Emilie Springer/ Homer News)
Kachemak Bay Campus confers degrees to Class of 2024

The commencement was held Wednesday in Pioneer Hall in Homer

A graduate of Kenai Peninsula College gives a thumbs up as graduates proceed into the 54th Annual Kenai Peninsula College Commencement Ceremony at Kenai Central High School on Thursday. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
‘Never be afraid to be a new you’

KPC grads take step toward future in commencement ceremony

Athletes from Nikiski Middle/High School’s track and field team visit with elementary students at Nikiski North Star Elementary School. (Photo provided)
‘Building leaders’: Nikiski track and field team supports community

The team has restarted the Nikiski Talent Show, painted stars on the sidewalks at Nikiski North Star Elementary and begun to coach middle and elementary schoolers

Kenai Peninsula Borough Mayor Peter Micciche speaks during a meeting of the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly in Soldotna, Alaska, on Tuesday, April 2, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Borough mayor proposes flat sales tax, mill rates in $180 million draft budget

Borough Mayor Peter Micciche emphasized sustainability and affordability

Most Read