You have a better chance of being hit by lightning than being killed by a bear. Literally.
Yet I know multiple people mauled by bears and only know of one hit by lightning, and that is basically folklore ~150 years ago.
You have a better chance of being hit by lightning than being killed by a bear. Literally.
Same here !Yet I know multiple people mauled by bears and only know of one hit by lightning, and that is basically folklore ~150 years ago.
Which I have said a thousand times on the "bear protection" threads for over a decade. No need to panic over a rare bear encounter.
You have a better chance of being hit by lightning than being killed by a bear. Literally.
It has been my recent experience that the guys on the west coast say that the 30-06 fine, and the guys in the east keep telling me it's too small.
Great thread guys. I appreciate all your comments
You have a better chance of being hit by lightning than being killed by a bear. Literally.
Maybe in Saskatchewan.
Yet I know multiple people mauled by bears and only know of one hit by lightning, and that is basically folklore ~150 years ago.
Maybe in Saskatchewan.
“Lies damn lies and statistics”
Bear maulings likely increase percentage wise depending on location, profession and time spent in bear country
I still ain’t scurred…
It all depends on where you live and if you come into contact with bears on a regular basis. You can’t use statistics for North America for lightning and bears to make comparisons. Most people in North America live in cities and will never see a bear or even be in their territory. A lot of people I know who live in the bush in bear country have had really close encounters, some serious or fatal. None have been struck by lightning. Your odds of a close encounter with bears is good if you are around them a lot. Most bears run away, but the odd one won’t. If you only hunt for a week a year in the fall, the odds a bad encounter are probably rare, unless you are successful and have a carcass to deal with.