I believed “bear spray” was a metaphor for a gun. Eg if you were posting online about camping and concerned about the algorithm disliking your use of the word gun, were going into a state park which has guns banned, or didn’t want to mention “gun” for some other reason, then you’d say “bear spray”, since bear spray is such an absurd & silly concept that people will certainly understand what you really mean.
Turns out, bear spray is real. Its pepper spray on steroids, and is actually more effective than a gun, since its easier to aim and is optimized to blind & actually cause pain rather than just damage. [EDIT:] Though see Jimmy’s comment below for a counter-point.
So far as I can tell, the common line that bear spray is more effective than firearms is based on an atrociously bad reading of the (limited) science, which is disavowed by the author of the studies. In short, successfully spraying a bear is more effective at driving off curious bears than simply having a firearm is are at stopping charging bears, but when you’re comparing apples to apples then firearms are much more effective.
Here’s a pretty good overview: https://www.outsideonline.com/2401248/does-bear-spray-work. I haven’t put a ton of work into verifying what he’s claiming here, but it does match with the other data I’ve seen and I haven’t seen anyone be nearly as careful and reach the opposite conclusion.
I believed “bear spray” was a metaphor for a gun. Eg if you were posting online about camping and concerned about the algorithm disliking your use of the word gun, were going into a state park which has guns banned, or didn’t want to mention “gun” for some other reason, then you’d say “bear spray”, since bear spray is such an absurd & silly concept that people will certainly understand what you really mean.
Turns out, bear spray is real. Its pepper spray on steroids, and is actually more effective than a gun, since its easier to aim and is optimized to blind & actually cause pain rather than just damage. [EDIT:] Though see Jimmy’s comment below for a counter-point.
Remember: Bear spray does not work like bug spray!
So far as I can tell, the common line that bear spray is more effective than firearms is based on an atrociously bad reading of the (limited) science, which is disavowed by the author of the studies. In short, successfully spraying a bear is more effective at driving off curious bears than simply having a firearm is are at stopping charging bears, but when you’re comparing apples to apples then firearms are much more effective.
Here’s a pretty good overview: https://www.outsideonline.com/2401248/does-bear-spray-work. I haven’t put a ton of work into verifying what he’s claiming here, but it does match with the other data I’ve seen and I haven’t seen anyone be nearly as careful and reach the opposite conclusion.