TimC wrote:S. Heisley wrote:Talia62 wrote:If you're thinking seriously about carrying, please remember that city and county laws can sometimes trump state and even national laws, if they are stricter. Rules for concealed carry can change with each boundary you cross.
Think positive. What you heard may have been immature "friends" scaring somebody on their first camping trip or even honeymoon. The neighboring camper may have been over-reacting because he didn't know better. If the victim(s) knew the people harassing them and thought them friends, they would not be speaking up and saying so.
I believe that it still applies that you are 35% less likely to have a problem when you are camping than you are in your own home. However, go with God and a can of wasp spray. Why wasp spray? Because it hits a target that is close or 20 feet away, temporarily blinding them; and, if you've had to use it, you tell the human (don't use it on animals) that they have to wash their eyes out and get to the hospital within 20 minutes or they'll damage their eye sight and possibly go blind. Once you've told them that, it becomes their choice what they do. Odds are, they'll leave. Once they are gone, you high-tail it out of there and never go back to that location. Call 911 as soon as you have reception and let the authorities know what happened. Will you ever have to use that can of wasp spray? ...Maybe on insects but probably not on humans. But, you will have saved yourself the worry of local laws or of somebody other than you getting hold of your gun because you won't need a gun along unless you're going to hunt for dinner.
Probably (& hopefully), the above is a plan that you'll never need and maybe it'll make you feel better about camping.
...Just my 2 cents.
I like the wasp spray idea. Or pepper spray (large bottle for bears and such). K.I.S.S. is my mantra! I don't need the complications of a gun and changing regulations every time I pass into another jurisdiction. And explaining what happened after the fact. I'm sure there would be doubts in my story no matter the facts.
Sharon, your two cents are worth a fortune to me. You just saved me countless hours perusing the internet about what handgun to buy. Then hour upon hour making sure I know the regulations and getting a CC license. And the money saved! Hundreds at least...
I would think long and hard before firing off pepper spray in or near a small enclosed space like a teardrop.
A good friend of mine takes 12 gauge shells, open the end with a screwdriver and a pair of pliers, dumps out the shot, then uses a pencil to pack toilet paper into the end of the shell. The. Close the shell back up and load the shotgun.
When you fire them off, no one gets hurt. What does happen is about 25 feet of fireball before the toilet paper burns up and a godawful bang. What also happens is just about anyone hitting the ground as fast as they can and covering up like a turtle.
I've never felt unsafe in a campground. We tend to stay in corps of engineers campgrounds whenever we can. Still, if it bothers you there's nothing wrong with taking reasonable precautions to reassure yourself.