Bear spray
Pacific Rim National Park Reserve
Whether you are hiking, picnicking, camping, biking, trail running, or paddling in Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, carrying bear spray is a good idea. It may reduce your risk of injury if you are in an aggressive encounter with a bear and/or other aggressive wildlife. Using bear spray is always a last resort; do all you can to avoid a bear encounter in the first place. Prepare carefully before you head into bear country.
1. What is bear spray?
It is a deterrent containing capsaicin, a chemical found in chili peppers. It comes in a small, portable spray canister and is intended to repel a bear in the event of a close encounter.
2. What does it do?
The canister releases a cone-shaped cloud of pepper spray to a distance of approximately 5 m and at a speed of over 100 km/h. When a bear walks into the spray, its eyes and skin will sting and it will have difficulty breathing—symptoms nasty enough to prompt a retreat. The spray is non-lethal: the bear will be uncomfortable, but unharmed.
3. What should I look for when buying bear spray?
- Check the expiry date.
- Does it have a safety clip?
- Does it say bear spray or bear repellent? To be legal in Canada, the label must clearly show that it is intended for use on animals; the package volume cannot exceed 500 ml.
- Size and strength: a 225 ml can (about 10 seconds worth) with 0.75%-1% capsaicin is recommended.
4. Before hitting the trail
- Read the instructions.
- Carry it in a holster you can easily reach with your dominant hand (if you are right-handed, carry it on the right side of your body). If you are biking, place it in the bike’s water bottle rack. Having it in your pack is a no-no—a surprise bear encounter can happen in seconds, and you want to be ready!
- At least one person in your group should carry it, but it’s best if everyone has their own (you want backup, right?).
5. Getting there
En route to the trail, carry it with the safety clip on in the trunk of your vehicle or in a sealed container. Avoid temperature extremes and the risk of puncturing. It is not permissible to carry bear spray on a commercial airline, even in your checked baggage.
6. When should I use it?
Bear spray is your “last-resort” tool: have it ready, but try to calmly and slowly get out of the bear’s way first. If the bear comes towards you, yell “Hey Bear!” The bear has to be in close range (less than a car length) for your spray to be effective. Use only if the bear acts aggressively.
7. How do I use it?
Remove the safety clip and aim for the bear’s face (make sure the nozzle is pointing away from you). You want to create a wall of spray between you and the bear. Give quick, one-second bursts until the bear retreats. Leave the area immediately. Wind or rain may reduce the spray’s effectiveness; be careful not to get in the path of the spray.
8. How NOT to use it
Don’t spray it on yourself, your tent or your gear. Studies have found that the lingering smell actually attracts bears! If it can stop a bear in its tracks, imagine what it would feel like on you. Check the label for health precautions.
How do I use bear spray?
Please report all bear, cougar and wolf encounters and sightings in Pacific Rim National Park Reserve to our 24 hr Dispatch at 250-726-3604 or 1-877-852-3100.
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