Always carry a big revolver. Always.
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- Old Ironsights
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Always carry a big revolver. Always.
Montana Football Player Tackled by Grizzly Bear
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
BILLINGS, Mont. — Carroll College freshman wide receiver Roman Morris had never been tackled like this before.
Morris, who was bow hunting with two friends, was crouched on a hillside north of Gardiner at dawn Saturday when a female grizzly bear that was walking by turned and attacked him.
"It charged down the hill and just drilled me," said Morris, 21, of Whitewater.
Over the next 30 to 45 seconds, Morris fought with the bear as it bit and clawed, severed his left hamstring, punctured his shoulder, chomped at his head and tossed him around.
"I thought the whole time, This is so messed up. I'm going to die, I'm going to die,"' said Morris, a pre-med major.
The bear ran off after a friend fired a pistol. Morris underwent surgery at a Livingston hospital and was recuperating Monday at his brother's house in Helena.
"I still have a pretty dang good headache from the whole thing," he told The Billings Gazette in a telephone interview.
Morris, who was not on the Carroll football team's traveling squad for Saturday's game at Butte, said he and his brother, Mitch, and friend, Josh Love, set out to Beattie Gulch early Saturday to bow hunt for elk.
Daylight was just arriving as the three split up. Morris found a spot behind some sagebrush. After hearing some rustling, he pulled an arrow from his quiver and readied his bow. Just then, he saw the grizzly about 15 feet away, walking at an angle toward him. He felt certain the bear knew he was there.
Morris thought briefly about shooting it but thought that would only antagonize the animal.
Instead, he waited and hoped the bear would keep walking.
However, the bear turned and charged. Morris said he stood partway up and started to draw his bow when the grizzly hit him. For several seconds as they slid downhill, he held the bear's head and pounded away with his fist.
"I put everything I had into it. It didn't budge at all," said Morris, who is 6 feet, 2 inches, and 205 pounds.
The grizzly swatted Morris, its claw stabbing a 2-inch hole into his shoulder. He dropped down and put his hands behind his head. The bear bit at his head several times, but the slick outer layer on his hooded jacket apparently prevented the bear from clamping down.
"That jacket probably saved my life," he said.
The bear tried to roll him over, looking for a bite of his face or head, he said. Morris said he tried to play dead but also kept pushing the bear away as it bit and slapped at him.
Finally, the grizzly tore into his left leg — leaving a deep 9-inch gash — and tossed him, perhaps five to eight feet, he said.
"I don't know how you can stay still when it sinks its teeth into you," Morris said.
The bear kept picking him up and dropping him and Morris had been bitten more than a dozen times. Then the attack stopped.
His friend fired a shot and the grizzly took off.
Morris and the two others hiked a mile or so back to the car.
The attack came just hours before two Pennsylvania hunters shot a grizzly bear in self defense after bear spray didn't deter the charging bear.
On Monday, Morris said he still didn't understand why the bear attacked him. She was with three cubs, but they weren't under any threat as far as he could tell. Morris wasn't carrying pepper spray, saying he wasn't convinced it's as effective at keeping bears at bay as some claim.
The grizzly was doing more than just defending itself, Morris thinks.
"It was looking at me like I was an easy meal," Morris said.
The doctor told him he can't put pressure or weight on his injured leg for the next month or so and that it could be about a year before it's back to normal. Morris still hopes to fill his elk tag.
"I'm definitely going back out hunting as soon as I can," he said.
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
BILLINGS, Mont. — Carroll College freshman wide receiver Roman Morris had never been tackled like this before.
Morris, who was bow hunting with two friends, was crouched on a hillside north of Gardiner at dawn Saturday when a female grizzly bear that was walking by turned and attacked him.
"It charged down the hill and just drilled me," said Morris, 21, of Whitewater.
Over the next 30 to 45 seconds, Morris fought with the bear as it bit and clawed, severed his left hamstring, punctured his shoulder, chomped at his head and tossed him around.
"I thought the whole time, This is so messed up. I'm going to die, I'm going to die,"' said Morris, a pre-med major.
The bear ran off after a friend fired a pistol. Morris underwent surgery at a Livingston hospital and was recuperating Monday at his brother's house in Helena.
"I still have a pretty dang good headache from the whole thing," he told The Billings Gazette in a telephone interview.
Morris, who was not on the Carroll football team's traveling squad for Saturday's game at Butte, said he and his brother, Mitch, and friend, Josh Love, set out to Beattie Gulch early Saturday to bow hunt for elk.
Daylight was just arriving as the three split up. Morris found a spot behind some sagebrush. After hearing some rustling, he pulled an arrow from his quiver and readied his bow. Just then, he saw the grizzly about 15 feet away, walking at an angle toward him. He felt certain the bear knew he was there.
Morris thought briefly about shooting it but thought that would only antagonize the animal.
Instead, he waited and hoped the bear would keep walking.
However, the bear turned and charged. Morris said he stood partway up and started to draw his bow when the grizzly hit him. For several seconds as they slid downhill, he held the bear's head and pounded away with his fist.
"I put everything I had into it. It didn't budge at all," said Morris, who is 6 feet, 2 inches, and 205 pounds.
The grizzly swatted Morris, its claw stabbing a 2-inch hole into his shoulder. He dropped down and put his hands behind his head. The bear bit at his head several times, but the slick outer layer on his hooded jacket apparently prevented the bear from clamping down.
"That jacket probably saved my life," he said.
The bear tried to roll him over, looking for a bite of his face or head, he said. Morris said he tried to play dead but also kept pushing the bear away as it bit and slapped at him.
Finally, the grizzly tore into his left leg — leaving a deep 9-inch gash — and tossed him, perhaps five to eight feet, he said.
"I don't know how you can stay still when it sinks its teeth into you," Morris said.
The bear kept picking him up and dropping him and Morris had been bitten more than a dozen times. Then the attack stopped.
His friend fired a shot and the grizzly took off.
Morris and the two others hiked a mile or so back to the car.
The attack came just hours before two Pennsylvania hunters shot a grizzly bear in self defense after bear spray didn't deter the charging bear.
On Monday, Morris said he still didn't understand why the bear attacked him. She was with three cubs, but they weren't under any threat as far as he could tell. Morris wasn't carrying pepper spray, saying he wasn't convinced it's as effective at keeping bears at bay as some claim.
The grizzly was doing more than just defending itself, Morris thinks.
"It was looking at me like I was an easy meal," Morris said.
The doctor told him he can't put pressure or weight on his injured leg for the next month or so and that it could be about a year before it's back to normal. Morris still hopes to fill his elk tag.
"I'm definitely going back out hunting as soon as I can," he said.
C2N14... because life is not energetic enough.
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
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Lucky man.
I like this statment "The attack came just hours before two Pennsylvania hunters shot a grizzly bear in self defense after bear spray didn't deter the charging bear."
In a million years I'd never depend on spray in bear country.
I had an encouter of sorts with a Black bear sow and her cub about 3 weeks ago. She was behind me headed right towards me but had seen me or winded 25-30 yards away. First sign of blackbear I've seen south of Atlanta Mi.
I was small game hunting at the time and all I could do was think of how small that 22Lr boltaction looked in my hands.
After that I'll never get caught like that again.
I like this statment "The attack came just hours before two Pennsylvania hunters shot a grizzly bear in self defense after bear spray didn't deter the charging bear."
In a million years I'd never depend on spray in bear country.
I had an encouter of sorts with a Black bear sow and her cub about 3 weeks ago. She was behind me headed right towards me but had seen me or winded 25-30 yards away. First sign of blackbear I've seen south of Atlanta Mi.
I was small game hunting at the time and all I could do was think of how small that 22Lr boltaction looked in my hands.
After that I'll never get caught like that again.
He sure is lucky to be alive. What I think is silly is that in most states it's illegal to carry a pistol when you're bow hunting. I think I'd have to take that chance in grizzly country. I didn't like having to rely on pepper spray for dogs when I was a field tech. It didn't always work on them. Depending on it for grizzlies just seems absurd.
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That is why I don't want to carry only a 22 pistol when I go out fishing. My thought is that you should carry a pistol that would have a good chance of protecting you from the biggest baddest predator you should encounter. Out here, it would be a mountain lion. I always carry my .41 mag or the 45 colt blackhawks.
CQ DX de KC0HBR
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- kimwcook
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I always, always, always carry a revolver, big revolver, on my hip when I'm out and about. A person will always lay down their rifle if they have to do something. Next thing ya know is your tens of feet away from your firearm and you need it now. If it's on your hip it's with you all the time.
Old Law Dawg
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Sage advice!!!kimwcook wrote:I always, always, always carry a revolver, big revolver, on my hip when I'm out and about. A person will always lay down their rifle if they have to do something. Next thing ya know is your tens of feet away from your firearm and you need it now. If it's on your hip it's with you all the time.
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- kimwcook
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Blaine, you're right. You can't carry a firearm while bow hunting in Washington State. It's nuts.
You know another kicker to the "common sense" hunting laws of Washington State is that you can't use, say, a 22, to dispatch a mortally wounded animal. If you're going to use a firearm to humanely dispatch the critter you have to use a firearm that meets the requirement to take the animal with. So for most it's a 44 mag minimum. Makes sense doesn't it.
You know another kicker to the "common sense" hunting laws of Washington State is that you can't use, say, a 22, to dispatch a mortally wounded animal. If you're going to use a firearm to humanely dispatch the critter you have to use a firearm that meets the requirement to take the animal with. So for most it's a 44 mag minimum. Makes sense doesn't it.

Old Law Dawg
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They HAVE made the handgun requirements vastly more easy: All it sez is 4" bbl and at least .24 cal. and to please use common sense. I could use my full size 1911 and if I stay in bow range, just might try it someday..I expect a 230 HydorShok at 30 or 40 yds would be just fine.kimwcook wrote:Blaine, you're right. You can't carry a firearm while bow hunting in Washington State. It's nuts.
You know another kicker to the "common sense" hunting laws of Washington State is that you can't use, say, a 22, to dispatch a mortally wounded animal. If you're going to use a firearm to humanely dispatch the critter you have to use a firearm that meets the requirement to take the animal with. So for most it's a 44 mag minimum. Makes sense doesn't it.
- kimwcook
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Blaine I'll check on that again, but I thought there was still the velocity/energy requirement. Which pretty much makes it a 6" 44 mag w/factory ammo. I can't see Washington State changing it. Could be I'm wrong, that'd be great.
I'm wrong. Just checked the site and your right. Unbelieveable. It's been the other way for so long I just couldn't see the state changing the requirement.
I'm wrong. Just checked the site and your right. Unbelieveable. It's been the other way for so long I just couldn't see the state changing the requirement.
Old Law Dawg
In Montana, it's legal to carry a handgun during archery season. One of my son's friends had to kill a mountain lion (with his bow) at arms length during bow season a year or two ago. He shot it right between the eyes (he is a very experienced hunter). He took it to the Dept of Fish and Game, who made him take them back to the spot were it happened. How you make up a story when the lion had an arrow between its eyes is beyond me.
Last year a friend of my Daughter's was stalked by a Wolf while bow hunting elk -- he had a handgun, but managed to scare it off without shooting.
Here's some more grizz happenings earlier in the fall --
"There has been a rash of grizzly attacks on hunters, grizzly shootings and a lot of close encounters with grizzlies and black bears this year that never made the headlines. Incidents have spanned the western half of the state from Gardiner to the Bitterroot to the Rocky Mountain Front."
http://montanastandard.com/articles/200 ... jijjfj.txt
Paul
Last year a friend of my Daughter's was stalked by a Wolf while bow hunting elk -- he had a handgun, but managed to scare it off without shooting.
Here's some more grizz happenings earlier in the fall --
"There has been a rash of grizzly attacks on hunters, grizzly shootings and a lot of close encounters with grizzlies and black bears this year that never made the headlines. Incidents have spanned the western half of the state from Gardiner to the Bitterroot to the Rocky Mountain Front."
http://montanastandard.com/articles/200 ... jijjfj.txt
Paul
LOL And.. even if that WERE true, ok, so.. you deserve to die because of it? Asinine.TedH wrote:That is the most absurd statement I have ever heard!BlaineCGarverakaTubbyTuba wrote: People have called and the answer is that if you can't defend yourself with the bow, you ain't a good enough shot to be hunting in the first place.....
Slow is just slow.
- Old Time Hunter
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This guy really let the bear get to close, 15 feet is about two body lengths of a big bear and they are very very fast. He should have had that bow at full draw long before the bear was that close. The same goes with a handgun. If a dangerous animal is getting close get ready for a possible attack. Human reflexes are not up to par with theres.
Be a boy scout, be prepared!
Oz
Be a boy scout, be prepared!
Oz
Remaining a curious student throughout life renders one’s life interesting and progressive.
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He stated that the way I feel.
Knowledge is all we do, see, touch, hear, read. What we do with that knowledge shows our wisdom.
Robert Smyth
He stated that the way I feel.
Knowledge is all we do, see, touch, hear, read. What we do with that knowledge shows our wisdom.
I have always relished the idea of carrying a big bore revolver while hunting. However the fact of the matter is I'm not a pistoleer in any sense of the word. Now go ahead and add a angry bear, stress, and adenaline on top of that. I hihgly doubt I could hit the darn thing unless it was chewing on my arm. The only bears around here are black bears and most would laugh at the size of of our bears. Most go around 200 pounds if that. I feel perfectly armed with my S&W M10 with either a 158gr SWC on top of a max +P charge of Unique ( 5.4gr ), or a 170gr SWC over the max charge of Unique ( 5.0gr ). After seeing the size of the black bears here, there is no doubt in my mind that either of those loads would not penetrate sufficiently.
VA allows carry by a CHP holder when hunting with bow OR muzzleloader.20cows wrote:In Texas, it was illegal to have a handgun bowhunting (during the archery only season) for a long time. A couple of years ago the law was changed to allow (maybe acknowledge is a better term) carry with a CHL while bow hunting.
It is interesting that you can't carry a cap'n'ball revolver when ML hunting.
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
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Re:
Aint they ever heard of insurance, bet they dont drive without it, bunch of mugs.BlaineCGarverakaTubbyTuba wrote:Washington is Insane....it's illegal (and strongly enforced) to have any handgun while bow hunting big game. People have called and the answer is that if you can't defend yourself with the bow, you ain't a good enough shot to be hunting in the first place.....
Regards
The Telegraphist
GUN CONTROL IS HITTING YOUR TARGET
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
We have a lot of bears down here in florida....
and I cant tell you how many close encounters I
have had...many with cubs...a very uneasy feeling to
say the least...
The closest ...maybe 15 yards from the base of my ladder stand....
25 to 30 yards on the ground turkey hunting...
The 44 mag is always with me...period!
Some of the bears are pushing 400 to 450 pounds...
and I cant tell you how many close encounters I
have had...many with cubs...a very uneasy feeling to
say the least...
The closest ...maybe 15 yards from the base of my ladder stand....
25 to 30 yards on the ground turkey hunting...
The 44 mag is always with me...period!
Some of the bears are pushing 400 to 450 pounds...
LETS GO SHOOT'N BOYS
- Buck Elliott
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Re:
Wyoming now specifically allows bow hunters to carry firearms just for such situations.CraigC wrote:He sure is lucky to be alive. What I think is silly is that in most states it's illegal to carry a pistol when you're bow hunting. I think I'd have to take that chance in grizzly country. I didn't like having to rely on pepper spray for dogs when I was a field tech. It didn't always work on them. Depending on it for grizzlies just seems absurd.
Regards
Buck
Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
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Life has a way of making the foreseeable that which never happens, and the unforeseeable, that which your life becomes...
- Old Ironsights
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Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
One or two years ago Indiana began "allowing" people with a Carry Permit to carry their sidearm while bow hunting. Used to be you couldn't carry any firearm that was not "legal" for the license/season in question. Now, within reason (your SD Piece can't be a goose gun or 30-06) you can carry a handgun in any and all seasons.
C2N14... because life is not energetic enough.
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
Pa just started letting you carry CCW while bowhunting. they state though that the firearms that are carried for CCW are typically not what would be considered hunting firearms. Haven't gotten clarification on that.
Mike Johnson,
"Only those who will risk going too far, can possibly find out how far one can go." T.S. Eliot
"Only those who will risk going too far, can possibly find out how far one can go." T.S. Eliot
- Old Ironsights
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Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
It's kind of funny how they do it here...
I spoke with a Conservation Officer about one of the odder aspects - I can Hunt with a 4"+ .357 revolver loaded with .357 ammo, but if I put a finisher into a deer with my 2" SP101 using .357 ammo it's illegal.
Likewise, during ML or Archery, if I use a 4"+ .357 refolver to put a finisher into a downed deer, it is illegal.
But I can carry anything I want - "legal" or not - for Self Defense in the woods.
I spoke with a Conservation Officer about one of the odder aspects - I can Hunt with a 4"+ .357 revolver loaded with .357 ammo, but if I put a finisher into a deer with my 2" SP101 using .357 ammo it's illegal.
Likewise, during ML or Archery, if I use a 4"+ .357 refolver to put a finisher into a downed deer, it is illegal.
But I can carry anything I want - "legal" or not - for Self Defense in the woods.
C2N14... because life is not energetic enough.
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
What he really needs is my Mrs hairspray! Gets me out the room in a jiffy!
Nath
Nath

Psalm ch8.
Because I wish I could!
Because I wish I could!
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
any time i'm in the woods ,eithier the .357 s&w loaded with buffaloe bore 180"s or a .45acp loaded with 230gr. fmj. and hollowpoint, alternated. either beat throwing rocks.
Re: Re:
That's because Wyoming is one of the few truly American states remaining!Buck Elliott wrote:Wyoming now specifically allows bow hunters to carry firearms just for such situations.

bogie
Sadly, "Political Correctness" is the most powerful religion in America, and it has ruined our society.
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
Add a cigarette lighter, and you're in business!Nath wrote:What he really needs is my Mrs hairspray! Gets me out the room in a jiffy!
Nath

bogie
Sadly, "Political Correctness" is the most powerful religion in America, and it has ruined our society.
- Modoc ED
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Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
Back in the day (1950s & early 1960s) you could carry a firearm while bow hunting almost everywhere but there were instances of people shooting say a deer and then inserting an arrow into the deer and claiming they had killed it with an arrow. I know, I know -- sounds stupid but it happened. People that did it used the "Bow Season" to take additional game over what they could take during the regular deer season.
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
Well, they must have been something other than American up until a year ago, when they changed the law.That's because Wyoming is one of the few truly American states remaining!

At least they changed it in the right direction. I suppose all it takes is for someone who's been mauled to show off his wounds in the legislature. Probably get their attention.
That business about sticking an arrow in a bullet hole? Might have happened, sure. Still no excuse for legislators taking away a man's right to defend himself.
Why not a 50-state secession?
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Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
Good lesson for the anti-handgun crowd. A yound college football player got his butt kicked; your ol butt won't do any better. CARRY A HANDGUN! A BIG ONE!
Hunter Ed. instructor
NRA Basic pistol Inst.
NRA Personal protection inst.
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Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 1
NRA Basic pistol Inst.
NRA Personal protection inst.
NRA Range safety officer
Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful. But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night. Psalm 1
Re: Always carry a big revolver. Always.
carry a BIG gun shoot the dang bear and leave it. let the Game and Fish Ranger sort it out. At the end of the day I am going home to momma!!! heck with bear critters! 

"Today, we need a nation of Minutemen, citizens who are not only prepared to take arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as the basic purpose of their daily life and who are
willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom." - John F. Kennedy
willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom." - John F. Kennedy