...Not that there are any here in MB, but besides a black bear, I'd like to feel safe that it could be used on a grizzly or a polar bear. (which if I went on a northern canoe trip might be a concern - don't know for sure)
Thanks.
There seems to be some misunderstanding that I expected to meet a black bear, grizzly bear and polar bear all on one canoe trip. Not likely as as far as I know grizzes are extinct here in MB. But polar bears sure - they're an extreme hazard in Churchill and its conceivable that you would have to defend yourself from one if canoeing or backpacking in Northern Manitoba.
And one post did mention grizzlys here in MB so you never know. Conservation MB used to deny the existence of cougars here. (not the Palimino kind)
The bear that I have had an encounter with was a black bear. Thats would be the bear most likely to meet where I hunt and have backpacked/canoed. But who's to say I won't hunt in B.C. or even Alaska someday.
OK just speculating here but since we are not allow to carry a sidearm for bear defense, what .35 caliber backpackable rifle would be recommended instead?
I'm talking backpacking here, so yes a it would have a sling on it because a rifle inside a pack is of no use, again perhaps a misunderstanding since I said backpackable, but...
Something quick to bear (pardon the pun) and simple to use in a sudden encounter.
Key phrase here is 'sudden encounter'. I have had a sudden encounter with a bear. Luckily it turned out well for me as I was unarmed. But for others it has not. We have had several people mauled to death by bears in B.C., AB and Yukon recently. It has happened here in MB within the last decade. Hence I carry slugs now while grouse hunting. I'm not too worried when deer hunting because I am armed sufficiently to deter a bear or outright kill it. Plus I'm hunting hence I'm aware of my surroundings and focused on detection.
If it was legal to do so I'd carry a .454 Casull or something similar on my hip. But I'm not a trapper or geologist so I can't.
The thread was created for discussion on what would be a good bear defense firearm for non hunting wilderness activities: backpacking and canoe camping.
Not hunting when you're in the field armed and ready, perhaps with others armed and ready. Or maybe other hunters in the area who could help in an emergency.
Its for when you are on your own or in a small group and the sh*t hits the fan when you are least expecting it. Like when you are carrying a canoe on your shoulders while portaging. You might not even see the bear. That's why the reference to a non shooter. The non shooter might have the firearm and be the one to have to use it.
Did I mention simple and straight forward to use...
This is the reason for the emphasis on dependability and simplicity. I want something that a non shooter could understand and use after a few demonstrations. That may or may not include range time - in an ideal world it would. But probably wouldn't as we all live busy lives, and a non shooter unless highly motivated probably isn't interested in going to the range.
At best it might be a few practice rounds on the trail or shoreline.
You didn't provide much information regarding what type of rifle/action you prefer and what sort of budget you had in mind. I would give serious consideration to a good mauser 98 action and install a 20 inch barrel chambered in 35 Whelan.
I didn't specify type of firearm as I didn't want people to think only one type of rifle action. I did pick a caliber because I want something that will hit hard and not have too much recoil. .45/70s are out thank you. So are .300 Magnums, Nitro Expresses, big bore handguns and the like. I might entertain the thought of a .44 Mag but I'm leaning towards rifle not pistol calibers. I don't have experience with the .44 Mag in a rifle but I do in a S&W 629 and I know how that recoils. Again keep the non shooter in mind.
Shotguns are good, I hadn't thought of that. So are the pump rifles. My gut says stay away from autoloaders and even levers (that hurts as I'm a lever guy when hunting). If you must know my tendency would be a short bolt action. There were a number of good recommendations in this respect:
Remington 700s, Model 7s, Ruger 77s, Mauser 98 action...; calibers: .35 Whelen, .358 Win, .350 RM, .35 Rem...
As for price range... well again I didn't specify one but its safe to assume I'm not going out with a Cape gun or granddad's antique Winchester '95. No exotics or custom guns, no modern mag fed military with an Elcan or Eotech -
...something that if it falls into the river when you flip your canoe or bash against the rocks, or that non shooter drops - you either pick it up, clean it off and it still works; or if its a write off, you don't find yourself out of pocket thousands of $$$.
BTW I already hunt with a .358 BLR so that had something to do with the caliber choice.
Thanks to all who posted.