Posted on 05/16/2015 1:05:46 PM PDT by marktwain
Picture from From facebook.com/wardho Ward and Jami
A young Canadian was killed in what appears to be a predatory black bear attack in British Columbia, near Mckenzie, Canada. From vancouverson.com:
O'Connor slept outdoors Saturday night while his fiancée slept in their motorhome. After O'Connor's fiancée woke up Sunday she exited the motorhome, realized something was wrong and went to get help, said McLintock, in a news release.
When RCMP and conservation officers arrived, they shot and killed one lone wolf and one male black bear that was about 300 pounds in weight.
Gabrielle Louisa Parker On my, what a scary and exciting experience. you guys have any weapons for protection?
Danny O'Connor rushed to the campground and started searching through the bush for his son.
"I wanted to get out there and see if I could save him," he said.
"When I got there the bear was there," standing over his son's body, he said. "I couldn't go closer."It takes a brave man to rush to the scene of a bear attack, unarmed. With Canadian gun laws, it is likely that he was unable to borrow a gun from a neighbor. We can never know if a firearm could have been used to save Ward. The attack may have been so sudden as to prevent any resistance. Ms. Wallace has not mentioned that she heard any commotion in the night.
"SENECA LAKE, Ariz. A man out camping with his brother woke up with one heck of a headache, only to discover that a bear was biting him in the head.
Thanks to his quick reactions and to the handgun he was carrying Rodney Black, 51, will be OK
Black and his brother were sleeping at their campsite at Seneca Lake, Ariz., when Black said he felt an intense pain in his head. He said the next thing he knew, he was on the ground, blood was gushing everywhere and he couldn't see a thing.
His said his brother screamed out "Bear! and he managed to get out his handgun and shoot the animal dead.
"I don't know where I hit him," Black told the Arizona Republic. "He went down on the first shot and I emptied my revolver into him. I knew that I needed to make that first shot, or I was in more trouble.
1. Have a verifiable, eminent threat against your life never heard of one being issued, but it is in the law)
2. Have it issued as part of a trapping consession.
3. Have it issued for use as an official pest control permit (I met a Canadian who had that; he said he was the only one in Canada that he knew of.
Outdoors ping!
The Canadian did make himself look big.
The bear just thought “More to eat!”
Or if you’re a badazz FReeper, you just kill it with a knife.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1670661/posts
IF he had a handgun, he might have survived, but not likely. It sounds like it was the middle of the night and he was asleep. His fiancée only discovered him missing in the AM, so she didn’t hear a struggle. In bear country, he should have been sleeping inside.
Any time I go into the mountains, I carry ‘bear bangers’ and also bear spray as a last resort. Even the TransAlta Hydro boys, who maintain all the isolated hydro facilities in ‘K-Country’, are not allowed to carry guns. They depend on ‘bear bangers’. So far, no one has been attacked by a bear. The ‘bangers’ seem to do the trick!
If no one has been attacked, how do you know that the “bear bangers” work?
For us in southern country, perhaps you could explain what a “bear banger” is.
The term would bring to mind a large caliber handgun in the United States.
Balls of Titanium.
Bear countries with out Bangers!?!
I do electrical in northern Alberta, I always carry a 45/70, bear bangers and spray are a joke if your life is in danger.
That’s OK though, each to their own.
not available in USA.
Basically, a 'banger' is similar to a shotgun shell, but has no shot, only a small plastic cap. You place it on a 'pen' launcher, aim it up directly over your head, and pull the trigger. It fires into the air making a loud 'bang', like a shotgun blast, which scares the bear away.
The downside is, in a panic, if someone aims it towards the bear and fires, and it overshoots the bear, you have a scared, angry bear running away from the sound TOWARDS you!
Here is a link to a "Bear Banger" from Mountain Equipment Company in Calgary.
Spray is better than nothing, I guess. I believe the range is supposed to be 10 feet? If a bear is charging, in the time it takes to go from that 10 feet to your face, you would have to be EXTREMELY lucky to make the blast of spray count!
When the bear attacks, if you don’t have a banger, instead of bear spray, it is better just to have a co-worker with you who runs slower than you! ;>}
A slower running liberal? I’d have a hard time feeling bad heh
Sleeping outside in bear country? Darwin winner...
“I don’t have to outrun the bear, sweetie, I just have to outrun you.”
I ran into a black bear hiking a few weeks ago in NY; it was absolutely terrifying. It moved slowly closer when I turned to pick up a club, then moved off when I moved forward a little bit yelling (with a club in one hand, spray in the other, and a turd at my sphincter about to let loose). Last fall a foreign college student had been killed nearby (on the NJ side of the border), though I think they were taking selfies with the bear then scattered when it got closer. In any case, I wasn’t about to go out like that (and was probably lucky). The best way to describe the feeling is that I could literally “hear” my heart pounding; in the end the scariest thing was how silent the bear was (both watching me approach before I was aware of it and then when it turned and loped away). If I was hiking later in the year when more brush was grown in, I would have walked right into it without ever seeing it (and would have still had my map in one hand and GPS in the other).
I think the bear spray is more like 30 feet. I’ve heard where the bear spray is quicker than trying to get an aimed shot off and will scare the bear off (even just the sound and the fog). But sometimes they come back in a few seconds - so then a gun is needed.
I try to carry both, but often it is just the shotgun loaded with Brenneke slugs. So far the bears know we are out there working and stay clear.
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