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The Silvercore Podcast with Travis Bader

Travis Bader

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Ep. 183: Charged by a Brown Bear at 2 Meters - Torkel Norling on Tracking, Stress & the Never-Quit Mindset

Torkel Norling does 200 to 300 wounded game recoveries a year. He gets called by Swedish police in the middle of the night to track traffic-hit wildlife, hunts brown bears and lynx with dogs he's bred himself, and just wrote the book on modern blood tracking. Literally.In this episode, we cover the massive differences between Swedish and North American hunting culture, what happens during a real police tracking callout at 2 AM, a brown bear charge that stopped two meters from his face, the mental framework that separates good trackers from great ones, and why the "never quit" attitude matters more than breed, gear or method. Whether you track with dogs or alone with flagging tape and a headlamp, this one's for you. Guest referral by Erik Rohdin of Nordic Tales and American Trails. - https://open.spotify.com/show/0S6FLXVhVbXXD802ws5j1w Instragram - https://www.instagram.com/torkelnorling/ Modern Blood Tracking Book - https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/modern-blood-tracking/ _____Silvercore Club - https://bit.ly/2RiREb4 Online Training - https://bit.ly/3nJKx7U Other Training & Services - https://bit.ly/3vw6kSU Merchandise - https://bit.ly/3ecyvk9 Blog Page - https://bit.ly/3nEHs8W  Host Instagram - @Bader.Trav https://www.instagram.com/bader.travSilvercore Instagram - @SilvercoreOutdoors https://www.instagram.com/silvercoreoutdoors ____ Time Stamps [00:00:00] Intro and welcome[00:02:12] Swedish government-hunter relationship vs. North American friction[00:04:53] 12,000 wildlife accidents a year: Torkel's tracking operation[00:06:00] Moose population decline, wolves and Allemansrätten (right to roam)[00:07:44] BC vs. Sweden moose numbers and management philosophy[00:10:02] Why Sweden shoots cows and calves first, the science behind it[00:13:52] Wolf politics, the rural-urban divide[00:16:00] Two hunting traditions: independent forest dogs vs. continental driven hunts[00:18:48] Travis's Swedish hunting experiences, from Sollerön to the Norma estate[00:25:18] Advice for hunters without dogs, and why Torkel says there's no substitute[00:28:18] Police callout walkthrough: what happens when the phone rings at 2 AM[00:33:33] Hulda the scent hound, trained to only track on asphalt[00:36:22] The two-dog system, switching from tracker to bay dog[00:38:25] Close calls with wounded game, the mentality that separates good from great[00:40:52] The brown bear stories, dog sacrifice and a charge in the dark[00:46:36] Why Torkel felt zero stress with a bear two meters away[00:48:33] Travis on tunnel vision: skiing, motorcycles and a grizzly survivor[00:51:24] The stair model for stress, starting low and staying below the red line[00:53:14] Inoculation training: visualization, close-range drills and the safety bubble[01:01:02] Physical fitness as the foundation for mental toughness[01:02:16] The never-quit attitude, what elite trackers all have in common[01:06:21] Breaking tracking into single missions: find the start, follow the track[01:08:00] When you lose the trail, go back to the beginning and find your mistake[01:13:53] Practical tips for tracking without a dog[01:18:11] Drones, night vision, thermal: what Sweden allows after the shot[01:20:55] How Swedish hunt teams self-regulate without conservation officers[01:24:00] Bear hunting regulations, the two-dog limit and Plott Hounds from North America[01:29:44] Dog injuries and the reality of close-quarters predator work[01:35:05] Old methods vs. new, why emotion and tradition block progress[01:40:22] Top performers share knowledge freely, ego kills development[01:44:27] Where to find Modern Blood Tracking and how to connect with Torkel

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