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Depends on what you consider a "shooter" bear. If the bear is not a cub....typically younger than 1.5 years old, it can legally be harvested. The answer to your question solely relies on the hunter who has the opportunity to shoot this bear. Some hold out and want to harvest heavy old bears, and others harvest the first legal bear that presents itself. At the end of the day, shoot what you are satisfied with and pass up on bears that you would be okay with letting go and not filling your tag. I personally always hunt with the mentality; Don't pass on the first day what you would shoot on the last.

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He is for me.
 
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To my bear eyes that looks like a young boar to me. Look at the girth on the left front leg. I'd guess that bears dresses over 200lbs and is above the Michigan Black bear average for sure. Some will say not a shooter others will say definite shooter.
 

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Having shot and sitting with hundreds of hunters on a baits watching bears with over 45 year experience .....I learned many years ago to put some thing of known size to help judge the size of a bear at the bait ....especially for a hunter that hasn't seen many bears.....even experienced bear hunters like me......
I will say the bear in the picture is not very old....head is large for the body size....rear end is smaller for body size....belly has lots of ground clearance for a fall bear.....
Its great to shoot a large bear but this late in the hunt and having a good Michigan bear on the bait in good shooting light I would be pulling the trigger or telling my hunter to do it.....
This late in the hunt and also hunting in the UP there's not a lot of time left and cold weather will shut down baits real quick....
 

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View attachment 856081 Here is another pic. I’m no expert but no way is he only 200 lbs
Lol…Buckman66…that isn’t the same bear as the first 2 pics. Why would you think it was? This last pic is definitely a bigger mature boar than your first two pics. First two pics approximately 200 lb young boar. Last pic almost double that size.

As others have mentioned put a marker on your bait so you can use it to reference size, both in pics, and while actually on stand. 55 gallon drum height (where legal) is a great universal reference. A ribbon around on the tree by the bait the same height as a 55 gallon drum works great on state land. Remove when season has ended of course. Good luck! Hope you get one.
 
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