Handgun in Brown Bear Country?

ball151

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Jun 23, 2025
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Hey everyone,
I will be heading to the AK peninsula in about a month and just had a final call with our outfitter before they headed to the peninsula for the season. In that discussion, he mentioned not needing to bring a handgun for bear defense purposes. I then reached out to another outfitter friend up there who said the same thing. This seems so foreign to me, as currently when I'm hunting in grizzly country I carry a 10mm in a Kenai chest holster, and when in non-grizz country, I carry a 9mm on my chest for cats, etc. I was planning on taking my 10mm in chest holster to the peninsula, but after hearing two outfitters up there telling us this isn't needed has thrown us for a loop. Just wanted to float this out to everyone here and get your thoughts. Thanks so much in advance!
 
and with that I just saw a bear attack on Fox News. No, I would proudly be wearing my 10mm Glock 20 with Buffalo Bore flat nose.
 
It is interesting how different peoples attitudes and beliefs are when it comes to bear protection.

For what's it worth, if you are hunting with a guide and also carrying a rifle, it is highly unlikely you would actually ever draw a sidearm in genuine self-defense even if you carried one the whole time.

If I was bow hunting I'd carry a pistol, same with solo hunting. Otherwise, I'd be happy to not carry extra weight.
 
If your already questioning your outfitter this hunt is getting off on the wrong foot….

30 years guiding brown bears. I do not carry a handgun. I discourage clients from carrying handguns. It’s not needed. Could there be a one in a million situation it’s needed? Yes. Maybe carry a sword then as well. Or perhaps a trauma kit. A raft. Survival tent. Etc.

More guns is not typically what’s necessary….

Since the Rokslide crowd isn’t gonna be on your hunt I’d stick with the advice of the guy you’re paying.
 
Bottom line - I would listen to your guide.

Do what makes you feel good, and helps you sleep, but here are my thoughts: You’ll have a rifle with you, as will the outfitter. Those will both be vastly superior bear defense weapons. Having two firearms on your person is likely excessive to your requirements.

I live on the edge of town in the populous portion of Alaska, and this time of year (the browns are just starting to exit dens) I won’t take my garbage can down to the road without wearing my 10mm in a chest harness. The bears are particularly aggressive for the moment, as evidenced by the mauling that happened yesterday on JBER. But, that was a few US Army soldiers doing land navigation in a very bear-dense area that likely stumbled on a den occupied by a sow with cubs.

But…that’s not the same situation you’ll see on the peninsula. They will have been awake for a while, and generally want to avoid you. The bears are hunted there (as recently as last fall), which makes a difference in their behavior. The scariest bears (to me) will always be sows with cubs or a punk two year old that has just been run off by his mama and doesn’t know how to avoid trouble yet.

I don’t want to speak for your outfitter, but I don’t like have pistols in camp if everyone already has a rifle. More firearms + more people = more chance of a bad firearms accident.

All that said, when I do carry a pistol (camping, scouting, fishing) it’s a 10mm in a chest harness.
 
Bottom line - I would listen to your guide.

Do what makes you feel good, and helps you sleep, but here are my thoughts: You’ll have a rifle with you, as will the outfitter. Those will both be vastly superior bear defense weapons. Having two firearms on your person is likely excessive to your requirements.

I live on the edge of town in the populous portion of Alaska, and this time of year (the browns are just starting to exit dens) I won’t take my garbage can down to the road without wearing my 10mm in a chest harness. The bears are particularly aggressive for the moment, as evidenced by the mauling that happened yesterday on JBER. But, that was a few US Army soldiers doing land navigation in a very bear-dense area that likely stumbled on a den occupied by a sow with cubs.

But…that’s not the same situation you’ll see on the peninsula. They will have been awake for a while, and generally want to avoid you. The bears are hunted there (as recently as last fall), which makes a difference in their behavior. The scariest bears (to me) will always be sows with cubs or a punk two year old that has just been run off by his mama and doesn’t know how to avoid trouble yet.

I don’t want to speak for your outfitter, but I don’t like have pistols in camp if everyone already has a rifle. More firearms + more people = more chance of a bad firearms accident.

All that said, when I do carry a pistol (camping, scouting, fishing) it’s a 10mm in a chest harness.
Thanks so much, I appreciate the helpful, constructive reply.
 
Echoing what others have said - if it was a bowhunt or muzzleloader hunt, for sure, carry the handgun. But a rifle hunt, with a rifle-armed guide, that handgun wouldn't be much more than extra weight in that context, along with telling your guide you might be a difficult client who doesn't listen to a professional's seasoned advice. There might be situations, places, contexts, etc, where it would be a good idea to also have a bear handgun, but this doesn't sound like that.
 
ok, I was mostly kidding! Of course the OP should take the advice of his guide but I will admit that I am scared to death of bears and sharks.
 
Thanks guys, appreciate the input. I'm not one to go against what an outfitter tells me, but I at least wanted to pose the question here since I typically do carry a handgun when in the backcountry personally, and there are numerous other threads on here where most commenters are 'pro' carrying a handgun when in bear country (as do I when I'm backcountry hunting). Just wanted to ask the group. Thanks again.
 
I absolutely would carry a handgun in grizzly county....................if I didn't have a rifle in my hands.
Otherwise leave it at home or in the tent.
 
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