Do you feel the need to have a weapon when camping

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YJake

Adventurer
I have lost a bag of marshmellows to a Black Bear inside our tent cabin in Yosemite...with the wife saying "Do something!"....yea, right. BTW, I didn't know the son brought the marshmellows...


Mickey

This had me :Wow1:

Then it had me :coffeedrink:

And it ended with a :elkgrin:

Thanks for the laugh.

-Jake
 

xtatik

Explorer
I see the wanna be outdoorsmen are still trying to rub their horse crud in this thread...
Pretty idiotic. Just because someone spends a weekend out in the desert every 5-6 months does not make them an outdoorsmen.
First off bears are not all that loud unless they are foraging I have personally been nose to nose with a 350lb bear. I think we both messed ourselves as she went one way and I the other. My father had one swipe at his head and he never seen it until he heard it breathe out less than a foot above his head on a ledge. They are pretty neat to watch when they are foraging for bugs or berries. About 99% of all bears will run away from you when they SEE you not smell you as bears are quite curious to smells except human urine. That figure is grossly adjusted if the bear is a sow with cubs.
Second cats are not THAT reclusive, it is just that most people do not SEE them. They know very well that all they have to do is be still and they can stay right where they are. I have seen this happen quite a few times.

Chest-beater says what?
First off, this "wanna-be" has spent more time in the outdoors than you'd give credit for even if I had proven it to you.
I've slowed down a bit recently to 2 weekends a month locally, usually in the local ranges or Sierra. I still make week-long and multi-week long trips to more (much more) remote locations 3-4 times a year. Until very recently, I was being paid partially and reimbursed fully for taking clients on fishing and hunting forays. I was chosen to do this because my employer soon realised he'd hired someone that already had skills and knew his way around out there and it's a much less mundane form of entertainment than taking them golfing. I don't do golfing. Another reason was he knew I couldn't be relied upon to get any real work done over a weekend:D I'm not going to name the employer, but I'll tell you our primary business had nothing to do with the outdoor industry....it was a forest/building products company. It was a sweet gig...but that's only recent history.
I'm sorry to inform you that I'm not the gun opponent you'd like me to be. I love hunting, fishing, backpacking, climbing, among other things, and I've done them for as long as I can remember and I'm no kid or yuppie as you say. I do know what I'm talking about, both from study and experience. I just have issue with those who would state that a gun is "essential" to wilderness adventure......It simply isn't so!
I too have seen plenty of cats and I'm sorry but the best way to term their behavior is "reclusive". I didn't have to look far to find others referring to them in the same way. They are even reclusive amongst themselves. Except for very brief mating episodes every couple of years they live very solitary lives.

http:www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cougar
Second to last sentence, second paragraph.

http://www.wildernessutah.com/learn/mountainlions.html
Third paragraph.

And, for frightened bears making noise:

http://www.bear.org/website/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=168&Itemid=38
Scroll down to sounds. I know what I heard....
 
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john101477

Photographer in the Wild
Chest-beater says what?
First off, this "wanna-be" has spent more time in the outdoors than you'd give credit for even if I had proven it to you.
I'm sorry to inform you that I'm not the gun opponent you'd like me to be. I love hunting, fishing, backpacking, climbing, among other things, and I've done them for as long as I can remember and I'm no kid or yuppie as you say. I do know what I'm talking about, both from study and experience. I just have issue with those who would state that a gun is "essential" to wilderness adventure......It simply isn't so!
I too have seen plenty of cats and I'm sorry but the best way to term their behavior is "reclusive". I didn't have to look far to find others referring to them in the same way. They are even reclusive amongst themselves. Except for very brief mating episodes every couple of years they live very solitary lives.
Chest-beater says what?
Hahahaha long time since i heard that one!!! :REOutShootinghunter
Nah I am not asking for proof. We will have to agree to disagree on the "essentials" of packing in the outdoors. Most up here agree that it is an essential and going un-armed is considered stupidity.
I also think we have 2 different ideas of reclusive. No a cat is not gonna stand up and do the boogie dance for ya but just because people do not see them does not mean they are not there. Thats where I was going with that. Having such an ample outdoor life you know how easy it is for them to "hide".

Nice link on the bears to. In general situations they are a very quiet animal. I have also heard them grumble, even back and forth to each other. I have often smelled them long before seeing them if the wind was in the right direction.
 
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xtatik

Explorer
Nice link on the bears to. In general situations they are a very quiet animal. I have also heard them grumble, even back and forth to each other. I have often smelled them long before seeing them if the wind was in the right direction.
Well, no offense intended but, unless you were paying keen attention to the wind direction, I'm sure they smelled you long before you smelled them.:D
One of the things I found most interesting were the facts given in the last two points at the bottom of that page regarding Black Bear mothers and their cubs. I'd heard of this before, but had never seen it stated as fact. They don't protect their cubs like Grizz. I'd heard of Black Bear mothers abandoning their cubs when threatened......guess it's true...
 
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john101477

Photographer in the Wild
Well, no offense intended but, unless you were paying keen attention to the wind direction, I'm sure they smelled you long before you smelled them.:D
One of the things I found most interesting were the facts given in the last two points at the bottom of that page regarding Black Bear mothers and their cubs. I'd heard of this before, but had never seen it stated as fact. They don't protect their cubs like Grizz. I'd heard of Black Bear mothers abandoning their cubs when threatened......guess it's true...

Be carefull about believing sites like that to much. 4 years ago a man was killed by a black bear sow cause he got between her and her cub. This happened in south Idaho.
I do not trust any site claiming 100% scientific fact, many things are written down simply on a hypothesis that to them makes since. - Just another Sierra Club

We have had a steady increase in the bear population up here. many of the bears in the Sierra Cascades and surrounding foot hills do not hibernate at all. The weather does not require them to.

Well, no offense intended but, unless you were paying keen attention to the wind direction, I'm sure they smelled you long before you smelled them
No offense taken. I understand what your getting at but because of the nature of what I do, I generally have to take measures to eliminate my scent. Thats not to say I am always successful at it :D And yes I do always pay attention to wind direction. As a hunting guild I am sure you do as well.
 

JIMBO

Expedition Leader
:sombrero: I've been camping/off-roading/hiking(not now), for over 55 years

We make sure our kids wear helmits, when riding a bike--CAUSE SOMETHING MAY HAPPEN

We take first aid kits, in the boonies-CAUSE SOMETHING MAY HAPPEN

We wear lifepreservers when in a boat-CAUSE SOMETHING MAY HAPPEN

We carry a fishing license with us, when fishing-CAUSE SOMETHING MAY HAPPEN

We carry a GAZILLION different recovery tools-off-road-CAUSE SOMETHING MAY HAPPEN


I ALWAYS carry a S&W 1911(SS)-.45 cal, when I go "out"-CAUSE SOMETHING MAY HAPPEN

If you argue AGAINST IT, you don't live in the real world !!

This is not for arguement, it's just the way it is--

:victory::wings: JIMBO
 

xtatik

Explorer
I forgot to comment on this lol. Thats hilarious. While I have encounter or seen the after effects of a mad bear. One of my most memorable Black Bear encounters was at Mt. Shasta. I had set up a cot outside while on a family outing. during the night I was woken up by a bear eating jelly filled powder sugar donuts about 3 ft from me. Now I am kind of a heavy sleeper/snorer but that bear was not even worried about me until I stopped snoring, then he sniffed my hair and about tore our camp apart trying to get away.

Say John,
Why were those jelly-filled powder sugar donuts sitting just 3 ft from where you were sleeping? How'd that bear get a hold of those?.........tisk, tisk, tisk, bad outdoor boy!!
I think your right, you probably should pack a gun. But if that bear were to of met its demise resulting from a scenario like this.....it wouldn't be the bears fault:D.
Now, before you get your knickers in a knot. I could show you an ice chest in my garage that a bear had its way with.:eek: Pretty embarrassing, fortunately, he wasn't an experienced "ice chest specialist" like some bears, and was heckled until he left.
 
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john101477

Photographer in the Wild
Say John,
Why were those jelly-filled powder sugar donuts sitting just 3 ft from where you were sleeping? How'd that bear get a hold of those?.........tisk, tisk, tisk, bad outdoor boy!! .

Hahaha well they sure as heck did not start there lol. I was 17 at the time and as I stated before on a family camping/boating trip (if you can call half of the family hauling 5th wheel trailers up). The donuts were in a plastic storage box. of all the things in that the bear could have dug into it chose the donuts. The donut deal did not worry me in the least I curled back up in my bag and back to sleep I went. The women in camp were not to happy and wanted me in one of the trailers but it is not like the bear was gonna come back that night.
 

xtatik

Explorer
Hahaha well they sure as heck did not start there lol. I was 17 at the time and as I stated before on a family camping/boating trip (if you can call half of the family hauling 5th wheel trailers up). The donuts were in a plastic storage box. of all the things in that the bear could have dug into it chose the donuts. The donut deal did not worry me in the least I curled back up in my bag and back to sleep I went. The women in camp were not to happy and wanted me in one of the trailers but it is not like the bear was gonna come back that night.
Yeah well, lucky you. As much as I tried to get sleep that night, my daughter kept rustling me every time she heard the slightest noise.
 
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