- Joined
- Feb 2, 2020
- Location
- Scottsdale, AZ
I'm more interested where you are coming up with "hundreds" of people use it effectively it each year? That would be multiple encounters every day, all summer. Please do tell where your info comes from, cause i sure don't hear about more than a few all summer in western wyo each year.Honestly bear spray is proven affective by hundreds of unlucky and/or idiot tourists every year.
If you have it on you, and the grizzly is not literally already on top of you, why wouldn't you use the spray first?
ETA: not talking about the individual in the article, just an open question
Before I posted, I quickly searched and found an article from Winnepeg stating 1100 uses in 2022. But thanks to your comment I read further and yeah turns out it was 1100 uses in criminal acts... not against bearsapologies for the misinformation, and will edit my postI'm more interested where you are coming up with "hundreds" of people use it effectively it each year? That would be multiple encounters every day, all summer. Please do tell where your info comes from, cause i sure don't hear about more than a few all summer in western wyo each year.
I'll always prefer my gun over spray. I can shoot as a deterrent in early instances, along with protect myself in the case of a charge. I bring spray as well plenty of times, but my pistol is the 1st thing I'm reaching for when I have close encounters. If you have to use spray, and the wind happens to be ripping right in your face, how do you think that's gonna work?
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Spray is banned in Yosemite, not Yellowstone. I was just in Yellowstone and saw a lot of people, including park rangers, carrying bear spray and they had vendors renting it out.Spray works great, but its banned in Yellowstone NP....Really?