gness - "Youngmaf......are you seriously saying that those who live in remote areas of the USA should go around armed? Or have I got that wrong?
I lived near the foothills of The Rockies.....We spent a lot of time in the hills and mountains where bears were common.
I know that my family and I would have posed more of a danger carrying loaded guns on a walk through the woods than any bear would.
We learned how to be as safe as possible in bear country......and that didn't include going armed."
Thank you for bring some rational reasoning based on experience to the debate.
I would entirely agree that the way to avoid incidents with bears is to stay away from them.
That would include not walking in areas where numbers of bears are sited, and moving away when you hear them - they make enough noise moving about.
In the event that standard precuations have not prevailed, and a human / bear interface does take place, there are other options to be considered rather than attempting to shoot the animal dead, which would require a degree of marksmanship, as well as the correct weapon, and alarge dollop of nerve, to achieve.
As far as snakes are concerned - they wil always avoid human contact, which will only occur if the human is careless where they are walking.
In that event, a gun will be no help at all, since a snake is unliekly to rear up and invite a shot at it.
I think may YMB has watched too many westerns?
FYI YMB, you can't suck out the poison from a snakebite and spit - that doesn't work either.