Just to hit the extremes here, I knew a guy that carried a 5' Broadsword while hiking in the Whites Mtns of NH. He'd whip it out for his summit pictures.
When the kids tag along, the RedRider BB gun comes too. It’s great entertainment!
I don't have that either.It is also very unlikely that my house will burn down but I still carry insurance.
If you want to go to NY with a handgun, forget about it. It is hard enough for residents to get a pistol permit. Impossible for non-residents. Except maybe if you are wealthy, politically connected, and you pay off the right people.I don’t own a handgun, but carrying one across state lines (especially New England) never-mind borders can be a hassle with reciprocity. Getting licensed in multiple states sounds arduous and expensive.
Bear spray would work on a malicious wackadoodle in a pinch I suppose…
Bob
What did he do with the Broadsword?Just to hit the extremes here, I knew a guy that carried a 5' Broadsword while hiking in the Whites Mtns of NH. He'd whip it out for his summit pictures.
Anyone ever carried a gun in a canoe? Or in your vehicle to and from canoe trips?
I've tripped and lived all over Canada and seen multiple Black or brown bears and never once felt the need for a gun. Even the guy in my profile pic couldn't get away fast enough after I yelled and threw a handful of gravel. I prefer to be proactive and chase them away as soon as they come near, rather than reactive and wait until I have no options.I carry a large-bore rifle on remote, multi-week Alaska and Canada trips for grizzly and polar bear protection (and everyone has bear spray). (For those who think I should carry a shotgun, well, I don't have one, and I do have a Marlin 45-70 with hot loads.) The following incident perfectly describes a situation I don't want to get in. Losing a canoe up there would suck. https://www.garmin.com/en-US/blog/saved-by-garmin/couple-escapes-grizzly-bear/. And then there is the incident the year before we did an almost identical trip https://isthmus.com/news/cover-story/face-to-face-with-a-polar-bear/.
I'm not worried about black bears. Chasing away grizzly or polar bears has its limitations. And once those limitations have been exceeded, and a bear is destroying your canoe and you're 200+ miles from the nearest community, and probably further from any evacuation resource, as referenced in my original post, what do you do? I've lived throughout grizzly country (Wyoming, Montana and Alaska) for 25 years, and don't carry a firearm as my primary defense. The only time I've been charged (by a grizzly in Alaska) I had no physical defenses, and we both went home safely. Chasing it away, which you prefer, was not an option, and would have likely resulted in a different outcome.I've tripped and lived all over Canada and seen multiple Black or brown bears and never once felt the need for a gun. Even the guy in my profile pic couldn't get away fast enough after I yelled and threw a handful of gravel. I prefer to be proactive and chase them away as soon as they come near, rather than reactive and wait until I have no options.