thataway":ppl79y1f said:
in the last few years I have become a much stronger advocate of the PLB, hand held radio, and small survival gear pouch after reading about many preventable deaths in small boats--even the size of a dinghy or 13 foot whaler. The cost of a PLB is a couple hundred dollars, the VHF about $100. The small survival gear, good drink at dinner. All of these will fit in a number of life vests which have pockets. These do save lives, and take up very little room--something which we both carry with us aboard, or in the dinghy. Sure the chance of having to use it--is very small. But every year I read of over a dozen instances where lives would have been saved with these few items costing less than $400.
In any case, enjoy one of the best experiences you will every have!
This^^^^
Also this:
Be wary of where you get bear advice, and be especially wary of people telling you how often they ventured into bear country without adequate protection and were just fine. I can introduce you to a couple people who did that successfully for many years until the one day they didn't. I also have a good friend (and one of my field crew leaders with lots of experience) who got mauled with a 12 gauge shotgun on his shoulder. He just got blindsided with no warning and is lucky to be alive today because he handled the mauling as he was trained to.
You could also blindfold yourself and run across a busy 6 lane highway, and make it. It doesn't mean that this is a safe thing to do, or a good habit to have.
There is a lot of advice available on the internet that was submitted by people who have read about bears on the internet, and this pile of bad advice just circulates and feeds itself without being guided by any relevant experience. It is extremely difficult for the novice to discern fact from fabrication, so I would urge you, with all seriousness to purchase and watch (a few times) the video "Staying Safe in Bear Country." It is full of good information, vetted and compiled by professionals, and is useful for anyone from the Freshman to the professional.
I have worked around bears for the last 18 years, the last ten of which I have been in charge of my projects and crews. I have gone to incredible lengths to discourage bad encounters between bears and my crews (and me!). I have used active bear dens (day beds) as toilets to encourage bears to move along. I have rescued hanging caribou meat (and our only food) from a polar bear who had already had a few bites, and moved him along down the coast with nothing more than a chainsaw in my hand (though a big gun was over my shoulder).
I have also put bears down. Only twice, but in those cases there was absolutely nothing to do but end the ordeal. These bears were not right, hungry, probably starving, and willing to take risks healthy, well fed bears wouldn't.
You do not need a gun to get out of a bad bear encounter alive, and you are absolutely right to forego a firearm if it does not provide you with a greater sense of safety. In an untrained hand, a firearm is more likely to escalate a situation that seems scary but poses no real threat (i.e. a bluffing bear, what you experience 99.99999% of the time there is a tense encounter) by causing you to fire when you shouldn't, and injure (thereby enraging) the bear, causing it to eliminate you as a threat.
If you get some training, and some experience, and you are going to have a lot of bear encounters (i.e. you go to work with them every day), a firearm is very much worth considering. BUT. GOOD INFORMATION IS ESSENTIAL, REGARDLESS OF WHETHER YOU CHOSE A LETHAL OR NON-LETHAL DETERRENT (don't choose no deterrent).
Watch this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LM0OghpVaFY
Buy this video and watch a few times:
http://www.bearbiology.com/iba/safety-i ... untry.html
A bear encounter should be a good experience for everyone involved. It should be something that you enjoy, and remember fondly. The vast majority of encounters are exactly this, and so to conclude, I would discourage bearanoia, and not be so overly concerned about bears that it diminishes the fun on your trip. Getting the right info into your head to stay is the absolute best thing you can do. After all of this time, and the many many tense experiences I've had over the years, I still go out HOPING to see a bear.
Moose are statistically a bit more dangerous, but far more predictable. You will have moose trouble with cows during the calving season (May) that will diminish as time goes on, although cow moose can get feisty with a yearling with her. Bull moose get irritable during the rut (sept-dec) especially when they are holding a harem.
For moose, the instructions are simple, and very different. RUN AWAY!!! Do not ever stand up to a moose. You will lose. Moose have a hard time maintaining speed while changing direction, but they are very fast in a straight line. Run in zig-zags, use trees and other objects for cover, and try to get under something big, into a hard structure, or up a tree if you can climb quickly enough, though you better get 15' up before the moose is on you or you are coming down the hard way. A moose attack is rare, but moose do not bluff. If they are coming, they are usually coming for real. It's a much more predictable, but statistically much more serious threat.
For what it's worth, and in my opinion, I think a bear that has already decided to eat you is a much bigger threat than a charging moose, but the average bear is less dangerous than the average moose.