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    • Muck’s Apex Pro Vibram Arctic Grip Boot: An Honest Review 
    • What is the Best All-Around Hunting Rifle Caliber?
  • Home
  • About Crazy Canyon Media
  • Hunting
    • Guns
      • What is the Best All-Around Hunting Rifle Caliber?
      • Yes, I Do Teach My Kids to Shoot Guns…Here’s Why
      • The Best Youth Rifles for Deer and Big Game
      • How to Clean a Hunting Rifle: A 7-Step Guide to Maximizing Bore Accuracy
    • Backcountry Hydration Guide: How to Purify Water for Hunting and Camping
    • Hunting and Acute Mountain Sickness (Altitude Sickness): Signs, Symptoms, and Avoidance 
    • Hunters Need a New Ad Agency: Fixing the PR Problem in Hunting Media
    • Randy Newberg: Here’s How to Hunt Elk Out West On Your Own
    • How to Apply for Hunting Tags: Draw Strategy & Point System Guide
    • When, Where, and How to Find Shed Antlers
    • Chuck Adams: Interview With the World’s Greatest Bowhunter
    • Peer Pressure: How to Deal with Social Media and Hunting Season 
    • The Biggest Whitetail Deer in the Record Book: In Photos
    • The Biggest Moose Ever on Record: Top 5 Alaska-Yukon Bulls
    • How to Score a Deer
    • Cool Story, Bro: How to Write a Hunting Story That Doesn’t Suck
    • 12 Best Books About Hunting: Read Them for Free
    • The Hunter’s Guide to Preventing Tick and Mosquito Bites 
    • The Simple 4-Step Guide to Making Perfect Deer Jerky
    • Wild Game Recipe: Venison Enchilada Meatballs
    • How to Keep Wild Game Meat Clean in the Field
  • Fishing
    • Your Guide to a Surviving a Family Fishing Trip 
    • How to Fish for Trout in Alpine Lakes
    • Fishing for Moose at Hachet Lake Lodge, Saskatchewan
    • Best Fishing Books and Stories Ever
    • How to Catch Trout in A River
  • The Baddest Mountain Men, Pioneers, and Legends of the American West
    • Marie Dorion: Tough Momma of Willamette Valley
    • African American Mountain Man James Beckwourth
    • George Drouillard—Lewis and Clark’s Backcountry Renaissance Man
    • Montana Pioneer Woman Stagecoach Mary Fields
    • Hugh Glass: The Real Revenant Badass
    • The Surly Life of Jeremiah “Livereatin’ ” Johnson
    • John Wesley Powell: Badass Explorer of the Grand Canyon
    • John Colter: First White Dude to See Yellowstone’s Hell on Earth
    • Who Was Mountain Man Jim Bridger?
    • African American Mountain Man James Beckwourth
    • Jedediah Smith: Grizzly Wrestling Champion of the World (and Legendary Explorer)
    • Andrew Garcia: Montana’s Last Best Mountain Man
  • The Wild Life
    • Kids
      • Epic Outdoor Books for Kids
      • The Reality of Skiing With Kids—Is it Worth it? 
      • Six Tips for a Family Fishing Trip in the Florida Keys
      • How to Get Kids Outside…Montana Edition
      • Yes, I Do Teach My Kids to Shoot Guns…Here’s Why
      • Don’t Do This When Fishing with Kids
    • Travel
      • Why You Should Never Go to Yellowstone National Park 
      • Bozeman, Montana: How to Ruin a Perfectly Good Mountain Town
      • Maui Guide: Five Essential Tips to Know Before You Go 
      • 20 Questions About Puerto Rico…Answered 
      • Patillas, Puerto Rico: A Guide to the Perfect Day
    • Red Deer or Elk: What’s the Difference?
    • Why an Overnight River Trip Is the Ultimate Summer Adventure
    • Squirrel Warriors: The Art of Tiny Taxidermy and Primitive Skills
    • Five Ways to Keep Your Off-grid Cabin Secure
    • Chef Kristy Crabtree on Cooking with Wild Game
    • Cure Cabin Fever by Renting a Forest Service Cabin
    • #Buglife
    • Picking Huckleberries in Montana: A Guide with Easy Recipes
    • Load Up With Royal Tine: Montana’s Hunting Guide School
    • The Best Dog Mushing in Montana
  • Conservation
    • Back from the Dead: Montana Bighorn Sheep Restoration
    • Montana’s Bighorn Sheep Tags: Big Horns, Big Money
    • Montana’s Love Affair with Invasive Species
    • The Mission Mountains Wilderness Divide: Management and Culture of the CSKT Wilderness
  • Gear
    • LaCrosse Ursa MS Boots: An Honest Review of a Lightweight Hunting Boot
    • Bear Spray or Bullets: The Science Settles It
    • E-Scouting for Hunting: Plan Your 2026 Hunt Like a Pro
    • Five Father’s Day Gifts Under $100…and they don’t suck
    • How to Clean Leather Boots in 30 Minutes
    • Muck’s Apex Pro Vibram Arctic Grip Boot: An Honest Review 
    • What is the Best All-Around Hunting Rifle Caliber?
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Home Hunting

Bear Spray or Bullets: The Science Settles It

by PJ DelHomme
in Hunting
Ai generated image of a hunter macing a bear

In this very AI image, a hunter holds a massive hand cannon while he illustrates improper technique while deploying bear spray

The best available science on the effectiveness of bear spray has one conclusion: bear spray crushes bullets.

In a study published in the Journal of Wildlife Management in 2008, BYU associate professor Tom Smith and colleagues found that in 72 cases where people used bear spray to defend themselves from brown, black, and polar bears, the spray stopped the undesirable behavior more than 90 percent of the time. Crucially, 98 percent of the people involved walked away uninjured.

The Statistics: Why Spray Beats Lead

In a follow-up study, Smith et al. found that while discharging a firearm typically stopped encounters (84% for handguns, 76% for long guns), the margin for error is catastrophic: one in four incidents involving firearms led to human injury or death.

That’s the science. Then there is the real-world scenario of trying to hit a target the size of a tennis ball moving at 40 mph with a half-inch bullet.

George Hyde, General Manager at Counter Assault Bear Spray, told me that you have to make a spine or brain shot to stop that bear. He says your odds are a whole lot better with a shotgun cloud of spray.

The 3 Rules for Bear Country

As hunters, we do everything we’re not supposed to do in the woods. We’re quiet, we walk into the wind, and we use calls to sound like prey. Since we are begging for an encounter, here are three tips you need to survive.

1. The “No-Test” Rule

Old advice suggested giving your can a quick “test burst” to make sure it works. Do not do this. New research from 2020 shows that bear spray canisters lose up to 50% of their head pressure in the first second of spraying. That initial blast is your lifesaver—it has the most range and force. If you “test” it at the trailhead, you are walking into the woods with half of a weapon. Trust the expiration date, not a test fire.

2. Chest or Belt Placement

Elk bowhunter wearing a canister of bear spray on his hip.
As this bowhunter imitates a hot cow elk in heat, his bear spray is on his side at the ready. Sometimes, and it’s happened to me, elk calls bring in bears.

If your spray is in your pack, you might as well leave it at home. Carry it on your chest or your belt—somewhere you can grab it in under two seconds. When a bear charges from 30 feet away, you have less than half a second to react. If you fail to de-escalate and the bear commits, you want the spray in your hand before your brain even processes the fear.

3. Busting the Cold & Wind Myth

Many hunters ditch the spray in late season, fearing the cold kills the pressure. A 2020 study led by Dr. Tom Smith put this myth to bed. They tested spray at -9°F (-23°C) and in high headwinds. The result? The spray still fired effectively, creating a cloud that reached over 13 feet.

  • In the cold: Keep the canister inside your jacket or in a chest holster under your parka; your body heat will maintain the pressure.
  • In the wind: Even with a stiff breeze in your face, a high-pressure burst will still reach a bear 6 feet in front of you. A word of caution here: deploy this stuff into the wind as a last resort. When you inhale it, you’re going down just like that bear, and you’ll bear down for a while.

Deployment: How to Survive the Charge

You have about seven seconds of “ammunition” in an eight-ounce can. Do not dump the whole can at once.

If a bear charges to within 30-60 feet, fire a 1-2 second burst directed at the ground in front of the bear. You want the spray to bank off the ground and rise, creating a wall of peppers that the bear must run through. This attacks the eyes and the nose, a bear’s most sensitive organ.

Hunter education student demonstrating bear spray
With an inert can of bear spray, this Montana hunter education student gets in some low-key practice. Notice how he’s pointing at the ground in front of him and not at the “bear.”

First Aid and Cleanup

Bear spray is a deterrent, not a repellent. Never spray it on your tent or gear; the residue actually attracts bears. If you get it on your skin, wash with cold water and a non-oil-based soap (like Johnson’s Baby Shampoo or Dawn). Oil-based soaps just spread the pain.

And remember: gravity applies to bathing. Do not wash the peppers from your face down to other sensitive areas.

The Return on Investment

Hyde often hears hunters complain that $50 for a can of spray is too expensive. But compared to a box of premium ammo—and with a shelf life of four years—it’s the cheapest insurance you can buy. Should you need to use it, the return on investment is your life, and a story you get to share for the rest of it.


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  • The Baddest Mountain Men, Pioneers, and Legends of the American West
  • The Wild Life

© 2023 Crazy Canyon Media, LLC