bubba
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Mmmmmmmm
Trailcloud make good dinner!!
Trailcloud make good dinner!!
trailcloud said:Just a thought.. What happens now after all these years of bears being able to get food most nights from some luckless hiker.(myself included) So now everyone has bear cannisters--the bears can't get food ---where are they going next. I'm guessing they're going to the source--which is us!!! I'm expecting more encounters.
Black and grizzly bears rarely treat humans as food. (You are on a polar bear's menu.)trailcloud said:I'm guessing they're going to the source--which is us!!! I'm expecting more encounters.
DougPaul said:Far too late... How many of us can go off into the wilderness for an extended time with just a knife? (Or better yet, without even the knife...)
I don't think many are equipped to enter the backcountry with just a knife. Others have commented that basic understanding of what one is doing is what's required. Having proper equipment and the ability to use it is what this question is about. Those of us who fit this criteria have to suffer because of clueless trampers who take no precautions out of ignorence or bravado. It amazes me how the state has to resort to laws that place a burden upon hikers and backpackers who actually have a clue about what they are doing. How many of you camp at Marcy Dam, Johns Brook, Lake Colden, Flowed Lands etc and are surprised there are dozens of others about seeking a lean-to or flat stake of land to place a tent? Should you be surprised that with all of this intensive camping bears come to expect easy pickings? The simple evidence provided by looking around should tell any knowledgeable backpacker to expect they need to take care if they set up camp in such an area. The forcing of an expense for what amounts to a glorified mason jar is obscene. I have hiked and backpacked in the Northeast for nearly forty years and have seen a bear once and have not lost a single morsel of food. Why? because I tend to avoid camping in tent cities for one and because I take reasonable care to hang food well away from my tent/lean-to site. I am forced to accept the reality that overuse of these areas has been an ongoing problem for years now. it is not going to ease without severe use restrictions. It seems to me the requirement to purchase a commercial "vault" generates an instant high price to the product because the seller knows the user has no option and must pay the demanded price. By placing this burden upon backpackers through another "protect us from ourselves" law the state generates one more avenue where business can overcharge a captive public. By allowing use of homemade cannisters this offensive part of the regulation could be avoided. It is from what I can see a plastic jar, an eighty dollar plastic jar. I can't imagine any company setting a price of eighty dollars on a plastic jar without a law requiring you had to buy one.
DougPaul said:Far too late... How many of us can go off into the wilderness for an extended time with just a knife? (Or better yet, without even the knife...)
I was responding to ADackR's complaint about "dumbing down the adventure". Given how much gear we bring with us (and that we usually follow marked trails), our adventures are already dumbed down. Complaining about a new piece of gear dumbing things down is just drawing an arbitrary line in the sand. The cries of "unfair" etc have been greeting new techniques and equipment throughout the history of recreational mountaineering.AntlerPeak said:I don't think many are equipped to enter the backcountry with just a knife.
Unfortunately many (most?) homemade cannisters would not stop bears. A number of commercial cannisters/products have failed--see http://www.sierrawildbear.gov. Rangers also face the problem of accepting or rejecting any particular cannister--requiring commercial cannisters gives them a clear criterion. It also means that truly effective cannisters will be used.AntlerPeak said:By allowing use of homemade cannisters this offensive part of the regulation could be avoided. It is from what I can see a plastic jar, an eighty dollar plastic jar. I can't imagine any company setting a price of eighty dollars on a plastic jar without a law requiring you had to buy one.
If they consistently don't find any, they will most likely taper off. And if mama can't show the cubs that people leave food lying around, then the next generation will have even less reason to check us out.trailcloud said:I'm just saying that as the former providers of food the bears might see us as still the same and start making more frequent visits to our camp spots and harass us looking for snacks
mudhook51 said:Does anyone one know where to rent a cannister south of the high peaks? Coming in by rts 28 or 30, the northway, or even thru Utica area.
Bluethroatedone said:Okay,
So reading this thread makes me think I should buy one of these...but the question is where do you put...say you set up camp in the Great Gulf, do you bushwack 20 yards from your tent and put the thing on the ground and hope you find it the next day, do you put it in a tree or do you just leave it in your pack outside?
lumberzac said:At least 100’ away from camp on the ground. It’s best to put it in a small depression to help prevent it form rolling away. Keep the canister away from ledges/cliffs and water where it might float away.
skiguy said:What about hanging it?
Smitty said:.... anyone found camping in the area without one during the remainder of this season would be lent one to use while they are here.... .
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