Posted on 04/30/2019 5:42:39 PM PDT by SJackson
Grizzly bears are capable of running as fast as 40 mph.
Close encounters with hikers are a risk in the Yellowstone National Park area in Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, and park rangers recommend packing protection akin to mace for Manhattan muggers bear spray.
The grizzly population of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem has more than tripled since 1987. About 150 call the park home. The bears were declared a "threatened species" in the lower 48 states in 1975. Grizzly relatives also reside in Alaska.
Non-lethal bear spray carried in a cartridge resembling a small fire extinguisher expels "a fine cloud of Capsicum derivatives to temporarily reduce a bear's ability to breath, see, and smell," according to the National Park Service.
That buys time for a quick escape from the agile beasts.
Grizzly bears are roughly 1 1/2 to 2 times larger than black bears, which also roam the area, according to the the park service. Grizzly males weigh between 200 and 700 pounds and females between 200 and 400 pounds.
Adult grizzly bears stand about 3 1/2 feet at the shoulder, can climb trees, run up and down hill, and swim.
(Excerpt) Read more at sltrib.com ...
I was afraid someone would post that before I could.
Nah...
Get ‘em good and mad.
One major advantage of firearms v. bear spray is that with firearms, the bear is usually killed. It cannot go on to threaten and kill other humans.
Bear attacks are so rare, that if all the attacking bears were killed, it would not significantly effect the bear populations.
It would only mean less bear hunting permits would be issued.
Bear populations must be kept in check, and human intervention is the best way to do so.
The old Foster type 12 gauge slug at 10 yards will punch a very nice hole through an engine block. Would do the same to a bear.
Thanks for the ping and the link.
Serbu Super Shorty
“Non-lethal bear spray carried in a cartridge resembling a small fire extinguisher expels “a fine cloud of Capsicum derivatives to temporarily reduce a bear’s ability to breath, see, and smell,” according to the National Park Service. “
What they neglect to tell you is that bear spray won’t repel a hungry or mad Grizzly. It just won’t work.
I have photos of Mama bear and her three cubs in the yard years ago. We’re little SW of Cutten...
It’ll penetrate 3/8 steel plate, but won’t penetrate a bear skull?
Never shot a bear have you I have you.
I have killed them with pistols rifles and shotguns.
Slugs will pass through a bears skull with ease.
We just came home from Yellowstone yesterday. We saw 5 bears, from much closer than the recommended 100 yards. That’s because they were all on the side of the road. The first was a young bear grazing near a bridge. People had gathered to look at him... I figured the guard rail would inhibit him if he attacked. But he just kept grazing. The second was a young adult bear on the side of the road, stalking three antelopes that were on the other side of the road. I tried to get my camera out for the perfect shot, but he ran across the road. Meanwhile, the antelopes ran away parallel to the road, and by the time the bear got across the road, he seemed to have lost sight of them. We didn’t stick around to see if he would find them again—while watching a hunting bear would have been exciting, we were also part of a traffic jam. A bit further along the road, there was a mama with two yearling cubs, right by the road. We got nice pictures, then continued to drive very slowly (in case one of the cubs darted into the road). I should specify that the only time we got out of the car was to see the bear by the bridge, since we could not see what everyone was looking at. For all of the other bears, we stayed in the car with the windows up.
We could be upset because we were looking for moose and never did find any. But we saw a buffalo cow that had JUST given birth, dozens of other buffalo, several bighorn sheep, pronghorn antelope, elk, deer, and five black bears on that same day. So we really have nothing to complain about. (I still want to see a moose.)
More years ago than I would wish, I was fishing with my father in a remote northern Minnesota lake early in the morning. As we came around a point into a cove we met a mother moose swimming with her calf. I’m not sure who was most startled, but she turned and and took the baby ashore as we watched. Quite memorable.
You don’t need bear spray, and you don’t need a .45-70. just bring someone along with you who you don’t like that much, and a .22 revolver...y’all know the rest.
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