If you are particularly allergic to bee stings (or peanuts, or whatever) you sure should.
But the main question…what caliber of epi-pen is best?
If you are particularly allergic to bee stings (or peanuts, or whatever) you sure should.
Know a guy who owns a good stretch of land in Colorado. He was telling a tale of letting some friends stay up there and they brought their Harleys. Bears ate the seats first night.
But the main question…what caliber of epi-pen is best?
Must have been a rough ride home for those bikers.
So now I want to know what kind of handgun gives the best protection from lightning? I assume you need something with high velocity but capacity is irrelevant—you will not get more than one shot.
Or if you have asthma. My wife does, and sagebrush pollen can trigger an attach. That doesn't stop her from getting out in the hills though - she just carries an inhaler and a EpiPen, and she was wearing a dust mask while hiking and hunting for years before covid made face masks "fashionable."If you are particularly allergic to bee stings (or peanuts, or whatever) you sure should.
Especially from horses named "Lightening" or "Hornet."Apparently we need some important threads about self defense from horses!
Ive seen a grand total of two.
One was nothing more than a fuzzy rump as it ran away from my Rzr as I drove up a trail above Rock Creek in the Eastern Sierra.
The second one was a yellowy-phase bear. As it ran across the highway in Vermont it was so quick I first thought it was a golden retriever.
Other than that, the only bears Ive been around play Pac-12 football in Berkeley.
Stay safe.
Was the bear's name Yogi?We had a bear here in GA a few years ago that learned how to sneak up on hikers and steal their packs off their backs and run off into the woods with it to get food.
I had a good arm and aim. It was 10 to 15 yards awayAn iron skillet between the ears? How Sir, do you pull your pants up over all that brass?
Must have been a rough ride home for those bikers.
It was pretty worrisome to have a wife and three young boys 15 miles and three portages away from the nearest radio phone.....with nothing but a fillet knife and a Leatherman to defend ourselves with. (Canada's gun laws).
Yup, lends new meaning to the term hardtail.Must have been a rough ride home for those bikers.
It's funny that there are so many bear threads. Bears don't kill people with significant frequency. They kill 2-5 Americans per year. Out of 350 million Americans, that's not statistically significant. By comparison, every year an average of 41 Americans are killed by lightning.
Edited to add average American fatalities each year:
bears, 2-5
snakes, 2-5
spiders, 7
dogs, 16
cattle, 20
lightning, 41
bees, wasps, hornets, 62
horses, 100
Apparently we need some important threads about self defense from horses!
It's funny that there are so many bear threads. Bears don't kill people with significant frequency. They kill 2-5 Americans per year. Out of 350 million Americans, that's not statistically significant. By comparison, every year an average of 41 Americans are killed by lightning.
Edited to add average American fatalities each year:
bears, 2-5
snakes, 2-5
spiders, 7
dogs, 16
cattle, 20
lightning, 41
bees, wasps, hornets, 62
horses, 100
Apparently we need some important threads about self defense from horses!
Oh, I already have plenty of them. Excuses I mean - not guns.Let's be honest, these threads are an excuse to buy another gun.
It's funny that there are so many bear threads. Bears don't kill people with significant frequency. They kill 2-5 Americans per year. Out of 350 million Americans, that's not statistically significant. By comparison, every year an average of 41 Americans are killed by lightning.
Edited to add average American fatalities each year:
bears, 2-5
snakes, 2-5
spiders, 7
dogs, 16
cattle, 20
lightning, 41
bees, wasps, hornets, 62
horses, 100
Apparently we need some important threads about self defense from horses!