reed scott
Well-Known Member

Grizzly bear attacks and kills bicyclist camping in Montana
The attack triggered an intensive search by wildlife officials and law enforcement officers who planned to kill the animal.

That's scary! Only encounter we ever had was seeing a single cub on our path, actually got a picture of it while walking backwards will see if I can find it and upload.
Bear spray has been shown to be a more effective deterrent in bear attacks than guns. I've motorcycled in Alaska and Montana as well as Washington and Oregon, been within yards of bears both in Alaska (grizzly and black bear) and encountered large black bear at a fair distance hiking in Washington. It is unnerving to be close to one that is obviously studying you. I make it a point to carry bear spray when hiking and have carried it in easy reach while doing some bicycle touring in Idaho and eastern Oregon.
Definitely a wake up call for anyone hiking or biking in the back country. We’re set to road cycle the David Thompson Corridor in Clearwater Country tomorrow and will be vigilant of bears that occasionally prowl the forestry roads along that stretch of road. Will have bear spray and an air horn on hand just in case even though we'll be on the hwy. Our encounter with that grizzly along the 1A outside of Banff last week was too close for comfort.![]()
Grizzly bear attacks and kills bicyclist camping in Montana
The attack triggered an intensive search by wildlife officials and law enforcement officers who planned to kill the animal.www.cbsnews.com
If you carefully read the article, it becomes obvious that the bear was habituated to humans and was obviously interested in some food source in the area and humans were getting in the way. Once a bear is habituated the inevitable result is a dead bear and possibly injured or dead humans.Good point, probably good idea to have both, spray in off-hand, pistol in dominant hand during an encounter. Problem with bear spray is you can end up taking yourself out if its windy, and in this case in particular they were inside a tent when attacked and while you can shoot through a tent you can't spray through one, and you may only get one good shot vs 15 per magazine. Good thing with spray if you are upwind or its very calm is that its hard to miss for inexperienced shooters since they make a big fog, but the bad thing is that bear spray is a great deterrent to bears that are curious or rummaging through your stuff and not necessarily one that is aggressively hunting you or protecting its young. That's also the issue with the statistics that has been frequently brought up, is that bear spray is used far more commonly even on bears that are merely being curious or annoying and not remotely aggressive, whereas shootings are typically only a last resort to an actual attacking bear and not all reported since you have to fill out a defense report when killing which will be investigated so some may just leave the scene after and not self-report at all.
In any case, anything is certainly better than nothing, and if they had sprayed in the direction of the bear on the first encounter maybe it would have never come back.
Smart people can be pretty ignorant about specific things that seem like common sense if its something they just don't have a lot of experience with.If you carefully read the article, it becomes obvious that the bear was habituated to humans and was obviously interested in some food source in the area and humans were getting in the way. Once a bear is habituated the inevitable result is a dead bear and possibly injured or dead humans.
It depends, they have some sprays that can reach out a little further, and they say pick a brand that can fire for at least seven seconds continuously. I thought it was pretty obvious that no one is going to walk around with either bear spray or a pistol drawn at all times, be serious. The idea is that the moment you see a bear you draw rather than wait to determine the bear's intentions. A bear charge is very fast, but there's often a bit of time to drawn upon first siting a bear. If there's no time the response depends upon the type of bear, but I believe grizzly you are supposed to make yourself small, and either fire the spray behind you while balled up or shoot from retention. That's assuming you're the target, as you may be a responder assisting someone that is being attacked in your group.Bear spray has a very short effective range, and bear attacks typically take as long as a sneeze. And any pistol a normal person is likely to carry is only going to piss a bear off. Also if the environment is so high-threat that you'd have to walk around carrying bear spray in one hand and a pistol in the other it again begs the question of why you didn't just relocate to someplace safer?
You're watching too many Hollywood movies, as no one outside of the movies carries around a Desert Eagle, lmao! Not only are they too big to hold and carry, but if you touch the floating magazine on the bottom its going to jam after the first shot! I'm not that big and can handle a Glock 20 without issue, and they are used to take down large game. If you want to carry a rifle that's fine, but I believe the statistics show that pistols are more effective in stopping bear attacks than rifles, likely because they are so much faster to draw and fire rapidly. Rifles have greater effective range, but no one should be shooting a bear with a scope and still having the right to call it self-defense.Again, a pistol versus a griz is a bad idea, unless you are insane and packing a Desert Eagle. People who know their stuff know that a 12-gauge shotgun with slugs or a large-caliber big game rifle with rounds over 400 (e.g. a 470 nitro) are your best bets for stopping an attacking bear. Note that it is difficult to train properly with such a weapon (a big-game hunting rifle) as the recoil is wicked and they are insanely loud, so if you overtrain your reflexes kick in and you tend to flinch when firing, which does little for accuracy. In any event you are unlikely to get off more than one shot before the bear is on you, and you aren't going to have time to engage the sights.
The US Army 45 caliber automatic comes to mind. Target the head: grizzlies have a big one. Going to shoot, shoot to kill. My master sergeant co-worker loaded 45 hollow points. 44 magnum of the eagle has too much range for self-protection. Shotguns are too clumsy & heavy to sleep with.Again, a pistol versus a griz is a bad idea, unless you are insane and packing a Desert Eagle. People who know their stuff know that a 12-gauge shotgun with slugs or a large-caliber big game rifle with rounds over 400 (e.g. a 470 nitro) are your best bets for stopping an attacking bear. Note that it is difficult to train properly with such a weapon (a big-game hunting rifle) as the recoil is wicked and they are insanely loud, so if you overtrain your reflexes kick in and you tend to flinch when firing, which does little for accuracy. In any event you are unlikely to get off more than one shot before the bear is on you, and you aren't going to have time to engage the sights.
Holy Moly! She's gorgeous and she digs guns. Oh to be young and eager again!Smart people can be pretty ignorant about specific things that seem like common sense if its something they just don't have a lot of experience with.
It depends, they have some sprays that can reach out a little further, and they say pick a brand that can fire for at least seven seconds continuously. I thought it was pretty obvious that no one is going to walk around with either bear spray or a pistol drawn at all times, be serious. The idea is that the moment you see a bear you draw rather than wait to determine the bear's intentions. A bear charge is very fast, but there's often a bit of time to drawn upon first siting a bear. If there's no time the response depends upon the type of bear, but I believe grizzly you are supposed to make yourself small, and either fire the spray behind you while balled up or shoot from retention. That's assuming you're the target, as you may be a responder assisting someone that is being attacked in your group.
You're watching too many Hollywood movies, as no one outside of the movies carries around a Desert Eagle, lmao! Not only are they too big to hold and carry, but if you touch the floating magazine on the bottom its going to jam after the first shot! I'm not that big and can handle a Glock 20 without issue, and they are used to take down large game. If you want to carry a rifle that's fine, but I believe the statistics show that pistols are more effective in stopping bear attacks than rifles, likely because they are so much faster to draw and fire rapidly. Rifles have greater effective range, but no one should be shooting a bear with a scope and still having the right to call it self-defense.
Gotta disagree with you there, and I think its very important. Hunters cannot replace natural predators, as human hunters if anything tend to target the exact OPPOSITE of the animals they should be culling. No one wants to hunt the old and feeble deer for example, they go for the biggest strongest alpha buck they can find, which is actually detrimental to the gene pool. Same thing with sharks in the ocean, sharks prey on the weakest, which keeps the gene pool of the fish population much healthier than humans that fish indiscriminately or targeting just commercially viable fish. Predators are important, and we are top predators ourselves and so just need to be smart about defending ourselves.I really disdain the re-wilding movement. Grizzlies, wolves, mountain lions were exterminated from the lower 48 states at one point. Lets keep it that way. I won't be touring in a steel SUV around Montana or Idaho, but my cargo bicycle is a option. Sleeping in motels is not an option post - covid; I couldn't find a vacancy in Missouri 5/28.
You are correct in your assessments regarding unmanaged lands or areas where poaching cannot be controlled but ....Gotta disagree with you there, and I think its very important. Hunters cannot replace natural predators, as human hunters if anything tend to target the exact OPPOSITE of the animals they should be culling. No one wants to hunt the old and feeble deer for example, they go for the biggest strongest alpha buck they can find, which is actually detrimental to the gene pool. Same thing with sharks in the ocean, sharks prey on the weakest, which keeps the gene pool of the fish population much healthier than humans that fish indiscriminately or targeting just commercially viable fish. Predators are important, and we are top predators ourselves and so just need to be smart about defending ourselves.
If you are expert with firearms under "combat" conditions you are more likely to provoke grizzlies and hence have to use your expert ability. In this case the unnecessary killing of a grizzly bear may occur. On the other hand, if you are not expert in firearms in tense situations, you run the risk of wounding and further enraging a grizzly. To kill a charging grizzly bear in order to defend yourself, you must be capable of shooting to kill an object hurtling at you, perhaps through dense brush, at speeds of up to forty-four feet per second. If you aren't expert enough to do this, then you may be better off without a firearm...
Sidearms have a more limited role for protection against charging grizzly bears. My reason for saying this is mainly because of the superior marksmanship required to hit a charging bear in the right places.
To give the bear a reasonable chance to stop and give yourself reasonable safety, the person expert with firearms should perhaps wait until a charging grizzly is from fifty to one hundred feet away or even closer. This is far too close for anyone not expert with firearms. But only experts increase their margin of safety by considering shooting. At these ranges a charging grizzly bear, not shot, will reach a person in one and a half to two seconds.
Look up a Howdah pistol (12ga. slugs). Used in India for tigers. No other pistol is likely to stop a grizzly attack, and even a Howdah isn't really likely, unless you're very skilled.There is a book with great authority on this topic, certainly more than authority than any internet forum:
To quote from one section of the book (in my edition the parts about firearms were mostly on pages 230-234):
This book also has some excellent discussions about bear behavior overall and gives you very good information on how to safely avoid being put in a situation where you might ever need a firearm. Such knowledge is less expensive and weighs much less than a firearm and does not require the considerable investment in time and training to become proficient enough to be effective when attacked by a bear.