The bear was just over one thousand six hundred pounds It stood 12′ 6″ high at the shoulder, 14′ to the top of his head. It’s the largest grizzly bear ever recorded in the world. The pictures are of a man who works for the US Forest Service in Alaska and his trophy bear.
"So, Ted," I murmured, "Have you given any thought to who should shoot the first buck next month?" "You can," he replied, "I really wanna bear!!" I’ve always considered Ted to be quite giving in past times, but this was the icing on the cake, and as a result, I was given the opportunity to shoot the buck of my choice on any given day in exchange for Ted to make a one time crack at the first bear we seen. I could only help but wonder how my dear friend could be so foolish to think his chances of killing a bear, much less spotting one, would be worth passing up a choice buck. Regardless, he was pleased with the decision, and as such, I was too. I reached my numb hand out to finalize the bargain deal then redirected my attention to what remained ahead. The pact was binding.
The treetops shielded the dark, damp underworld from the morning’s golden warmth. Covering ground through the ankle busting real estate was no easy task. Our quaking hurdles over the fallen logs resembled that of a three legged equestrian horse on hot coals. My friend and I emerged from the havoc hours later and into a gaping backwater creek I located on the map the night before. This was the passageway to venison valley, or so I hoped.
Not far from there laid the diced roots and shredded leaves of a freshly tossed "skunk cabbage" salad. Ted’s eyes dazzled with overflowing delight. Once back into the openness of the creek, it appeared no different. In fact, carved hoof prints were now supplemented with bear tracks nearly nine inches in width. Focusing my attention away from Ted’s fascination, I caught glimpse of a ripple breaking the water’s surface. Circulating in the landlocked pool were a dozen spawning Coho salmon. Their decayed, frail bodies conveyed an ending to life’s journey. The skeletal remains of others lay strewn across the sand and algae covered bedrock. Their life swindled from a hunter of dissimilar drive, an ambition to survive. It was known, my friend and I stood on the very dinner plate of a huge beast.
Our ambush was terrible, and to prevent from being discovered, we grabbed our packs and fell back ten yards to seek refuge behind the archaic spruce. Through all the dense thickets surrounding us, an ample sized shooting lane presented itself to the right of the tree. It was evident the bear was going to continue his hunt down the creek and pass right by, providing Ted with the shoulder shot he needed. Then again, maybe it wasn’t so obvious.
Murphy’s Law contended our plan, and unwillingly baffled our strategy! Where we stood not seconds earlier, the brush began to part. Ted and I found ourselves going "Mano a Mano" with a bear of a lifetime. The sound of Ted’s heavy breathing was the only thing fading out the dull drum of my now sunken heart. I ran through my mental checklist, "Safety off, round chambered, finger on the trigger and relax." Now was not the time to make errors. I looked over at Ted who stood between the tree and I. "Are you ready," I asked. He nodded. My attention focused back on the crosshairs of my riflescope.
The gargantuan paw appeared first through the tall shoots, followed by the massive, robust cranium. The boar stepped closer. His head was lobbed low; his rusted muzzle leaked clouds of nasal vapor through quarter size nostrils; and those beady, bloodshot eyes stared through my partner and I. The solemn look alone was enough to make one feel threatened, but oddly the bear showed no sign of aggression. Each step closer the bear inched, I felt more compelled to renege on my agreement with Ted, and kill the bear myself.
"Pull the trigger!" I demanded Ted, "Pull the trigger!" The blast of Ted’s .338 Win-Mag rang out and sent a direct hit to the bear’s nerve center bringing him to his hindquarters. Two shots to the vitals followed, completely dropping the bear, while a series of three additional rounds provided enough insurance to tame our own racing anxieties. The boar dropped in his tracks. What played through my head in slow motion seemed endless, but in reality was over in a fraction of seconds.

Based on the contents of the bears stomach, the Fish and Wildlife Commission established the bear had killed at least two humans in the past 72 hours including a missing hiker.

Sick bastards.
NEAT.
My teacher told me about this lol.
my son showed me a picture of this beer and a picture of a guy that the bear had ripped to hell it was horrible then he told me that that bear was tall enough to see over a one story house glad that its dead. and I live close to where that bear was killed
nice bear teddy bear
um…. do you have any pics of the bear standing?
I don’t understand how you could destroy something so magnificent. What do hunters take back with them after the kill?
This bear, though large, is not the worlds largest bear (just a net myth). Also, contrary to what is reported, there was no evidence that this bear ever killed any humans (another net myth).