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Quote from: KFhunter on August 12, 2016, 09:41:17 AMI think it's irresponsible for a guide of this sort to carry a 9mm for protecting clients. He did his homework yes, and gambled it would be enough and got lucky. Now if this was his personal carry and took it for himself to go fishing that's fine, but not for taking clients. Also why don't they (guides) hand out bear spray to the clients and a quick course on deploying the spray? I could not aagree more. Very irresponsible decision!
I think it's irresponsible for a guide of this sort to carry a 9mm for protecting clients. He did his homework yes, and gambled it would be enough and got lucky. Now if this was his personal carry and took it for himself to go fishing that's fine, but not for taking clients. Also why don't they (guides) hand out bear spray to the clients and a quick course on deploying the spray?
I think the star of this show is the ammo. If it was the 9mm +P+ penetrator, that stuff out performs quite a bit of the .357 mag. I still wouldn't go 9mm or even semi-auto over revolver though, like said above.
For comparison. Bear spray deployed. Two mauled.http://komonews.com/news/local/bear-mauls-2-guides-from-seattle-cruise-company-in-alaska
A 9mm is not my first choice for a bear gun but I would prefer that over canned Tabasco. Many (most) clients cannot be trusted with bear spray, they are already jumpy and bearanoid in most cases and a few cases of clients spraying themselves or having guides and innocent bystander sprayed because they walked up behind someone explains why pepper spray is not handed out regularly. Most clients have no clue and are not outdoors people so giving them a can of bear spray is tantamount to just spraying yourself or throwing the can in the river and letting it float away. It is kind of funny that people claim the 9mm it is such a weak round and only marginally adequate for human protection but it did a pretty good job on that bear.