This whole bear defense thing seems to be endlessly debated almost entirely by people that don't spend much time around bears. They're not out there hunting you. They almost never randomly attack people. The moose are much more likely to kill you. You can whatif yourself into a 200lb backpack.
If 10lbs of handgun is what you need to feel safe and you don't mind carrying it go for it. If your idea of in the wild is on the seat of a 4 wheeler or 30 steps from your truck, it won't matter in the slightest.
As far as a trip to AK, my recommendation is to skip the road system entirely. Go to the parks and places you have to fly or boat to. Wrangel St. Elias NP, and not the copper mine. Lake Clark NP, Gates of the Arctic NP, Kenai Fjords NP but not exit glacier, Katmai NP and make sure to include 10k smokes, not just the lakes, Bearing Land Bridge NP, Kobuk Valley NP, Noatak NP, Yukon Charlie NP, Wood-Tikchik SP, Glacier Bay NP.
Thanks for the AK tips.
My trip is a retirement recon trip. Three weeks is laughable but it's what I got. If I ever retire to AK I'll have time to properly visit the wilds. Yukon Charlie and Wrangel St. Elias are at the top of my list. Gates and Brooks, also.
And a long float trip, too. Like this guy, except with company:
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My idea of wilds isn't on a 4 wheeler or 30 steps from my truck, so let's get that outta the way.
"Wild" is where Heimo lives and has lived since he moved back to AK after his first 1973 trip there. You remember his first trip, right? That's when he worked someone's trapline and nearly froze and starved. Then he moved back home. Then back to AK.
The inspiration for The Last Alaskans—the hit documentary series now on the Discovery+—James Campbell’s inimitable insider account of a family’s no...
www.simonandschuster.com
Wild is the Brooks Range where noted AK bush pilot Bud Helmericks lived in the 1940s with his first wife, Connie.
Wild is 1930's British Columbia where cattle rancher Richmond Hobson broke trail, chopped trees, and built a barn for his cattle before building a small cabin for him and his wife. He wrote about it in Grass Beyond The Mountains:
Amazon.com: Grass Beyond the Mountains: Discovering the Last Great Cattle Frontier: 9781400026623: Hobson, Richmond P.: Books
www.amazon.com
From what I see, plenty of Alaskans use 4 wheelers and trucks in the woods and wilds. Les and Norma Cobb did in 1974 and later. And Bud Helmericks sure did. On his own private island in Gates of The Arctic. No one in AK when he was alive, or even now, would accuse Bud of not knowing what the wilds were just because he used an ATV and truck in those wilds.
Bud's 4 wheelers and trucks are included in the sale of his island. "Only" $4m
It's surprising how many remote areas with access limited to plane, boat, ATV/snowmachine, have 4 wheelers, ATV's, even small tractors. These are areas without roads, cell service, or another human within sometimes hundreds of miles: