Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Flying in Alaska — The Last Frontier” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/flying-in-alaska-the-last-frontier/.
sounds like it was unfair - guessing you pummeled the Grizz with the flashlight then?I spent 26 years working as a PA at Prudhoe Bay. Spent a lot of time taking Medevacs from PB to Anchorage and Fairbanks. I sat down and figured out that I flew over Mt. McKinley about 3000 times and saw it in most of its moods. Almost cratered in a Lear 25 taking a guy with a flail chest into Anchorage during a storm with 125 kt crosswinds out of the SE. That was a wild ride. The time I was charged by a brown bear in my backyard at my home in Soldotna I was armed with a flashlight and that was a manifestly unfair fight. So, Dr. Will, I can relate to your stories. Now I live in NW Montana where the Griz are still around but the winters are at least two weeks shorter...
Actually, when it’s dark and there’s a brown bear running across the lawn at you snapping its jaws and woofing the first thing I wanted was that 12 bore pump gun loaded with Brenneke slugs on that shelf above the garage man door. When I went through the door the bruin lost sight of me and did not pursue further. I really did not want to have to kill it and face the mountain of paperwork that would ensue. As a member of the oilfield emergency response teams I had been trained to haze critters with 12 gauge cracker shells which are like a mini flash bang with a range of about 25 yards. I had a box of 25 in the garage so I traded two of the slugs for two of the crackers and went out the back door of the garage. I heard some rustling in the brush on the edge of the hill we lived on and there were two of this year’s model cubs off to my left. There was that WOOF again on my right and the cubs promptly ran to Mama. Even though it was a touching moment I aimed the shotgun and the light and promptly shot Mama Bear in the butt. The cracker shell fell to the ground and exploded and I was rewarded with the sight of the north ends of three brown bears heading south down the hill. That was absolutely the biggest “Oh scheiss!” moment I ever experienced.sounds like it was unfair - guessing you pummeled the Grizz with the flashlight then?