Hello flat8,
Great topic, thanks for posting it.
Yours truly has lived and worked in Alaska for well over 30 something years now.
Both grizzly and black bear encounters are very common here, sometimes even in our largest city, Anchorage.
Our polar bear are only common in the far northern region of this state.
Regardless of the specific bear sub-species, maulings are not very common here but, they do happen now and then.
Pepper spray seems to work very well on animals, including bears, if you deploy it before said animal launches a determined charge.
A determined charge evidently is only stopped reliably with a brain hit or a spinal hit, combined with adequate damage to same.
Personally, I’d prefer a large bore, fast handling rifle for this.
However, being a fly fishing junkie, especially as it pertains to wading remote salmon streams, a rifle and fly casting do not mix well.
During the times that I’ve carried mean old Mister .375 on such fishing trips, all too often I was leaving it a few steps away at best, leaned against a boulder or a willow bush.
It’s useless if your first realization that a bear has joined you in the creek is when, you see him standing slap bang half way between yourself and where you left your rifle, watching you flail the waters with your sink tip line.
I have experienced that exact scenario.
And so I eventually (around 1989 or 90 I think) caved in and bought a handgun that is, IMO well suited to carrying all day long and yet in a fairly powerful caliber, at least fairly powerful in handgun terms.
I settled on a S&W Model 629, 4” dreaded .44 magnum, double action revolver.
It is heavy enough to dampen recoil somewhat but light enough that I’m never tempted to leave it somewhere else while I’m fishing.
I chose that one because a full pressure .44 magnum is the top end of my recoil tolerance in shooting a lot for practice.
I have a chest holster for most stream fishing, as it often involves wading and this keeps it above the water very well.
Plus, as such it doesn’t interfere with my spastic fly rod antics.
This revolver’s sights are dedicated to only Federal brand “cast core” 300 grain flat nose factory ammunition.
Why Federal includes the word “core” in the name I cannot guess.
These bullets are monolithic solids, made from a VERY hard lead alloy.
There is no separate core per se.
They seem to be unavailable now but, I have enough to last awhile.
I’ve encountered many bears and some at only a few yards, down to a few feet.
One pressed his snout against me while I was in a tube tent / bivy sack and sniffed loudly, like a big hound.
However, much to my delight I’ve never been charged by one.
Merry Christmas to all,
Velo Dog.