After 3 or 4 showers and a couple of days later. “Smile” would not be the word I used. If I ever deploy this stuff on someone it is truly because they earned it. View attachment 221955
Damn you look like fresh hammered whale shit.
After 3 or 4 showers and a couple of days later. “Smile” would not be the word I used. If I ever deploy this stuff on someone it is truly because they earned it. View attachment 221955
Exactly.One guy was suicidal and broke his TV and was walking on the glass and cutting his self. I didnt want to send my officers into a small space to get him while he was able to really fight so I sprayed him. Hit him right between the eyes with a good 3 or 4 second spray.
No response. No eyes close nothing.
So I filled the room with a fogger and not so much as a sniffle. Even after 30 to 45 seconds.
By this point he was a bloody mess so we had to drag him out.
Second guy it initially made him close his eyes but he fought thru it.
After taking him down I was majorly contaminated. Really had the oily capsaicin rubbed into my exposed skin. It burned for almost a week at every shower or time I sweated.
It's a tool to create time and space when used for defense but not a magic bullet.
Mothballs under the hood keeps them away.I need a can of that on a motion detector, under the hood of my tractor. Rats are chewing hoses and wiring as fast as I can fix it.
Dogs don't have the same sensitivity to pepper/OC spray. It usually will get them back, but from what I understand it doesn't do much. I have never tried it.Kimber also has an interesting offering with which I have personal experience. Two trigger pulls. Two shots - that's all ya get. Essentially aimed like a pistol and charged with a primer vs aerosol. I deployed one shot in the face of a freaking massive and pissed off cinnamon Doberman. Adrenaline rattled as he was, it stopped him immediately in his tracks and sent him packing, hollering until he hit a patch of grass. The only thing he could do was cry and rub his face on it. I and my little mutt sauntered away with hearts beating pretty quickly I assure you. I'm a believer and carry one every morning when we walk the mutts. I have no desire to shoot a dog. Don't see why it wouldn't be equally effective on two-legged curs.
When there is a violent crowd and officers are working on a guy and a gal who just got shot and we are unable to give first aid because they won't stay back (shooter unknown) having a tool to quickly clear a block makes me smile.After 3 or 4 showers and a couple of days later. “Smile” would not be the word I used. If I ever deploy this stuff on someone it is truly because they earned it. View attachment 221955
Dogs don't have the same sensitivity to pepper/OC spray. It usually will get them back, but from what I understand it doesn't do much. I have never tried it.
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For a day or 2.Mothballs under the hood keeps them away.
we used to rub down the wiring with pepper sauceI need a can of that on a motion detector, under the hood of my tractor. Rats are chewing hoses and wiring as fast as I can fix it.
This dog definitely had sensitivity. Whatever is in the Kimber mixture had an immediate and incapacitating affect. As far as this combination is concerned, your understanding is inaccurate.Dogs don't have the same sensitivity to pepper/OC spray. It usually will get them back, but from what I understand it doesn't do much. I have never tried it.
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I need a can of that on a motion detector, under the hood of my tractor. Rats are chewing hoses and wiring as fast as I can fix it.
Animal shelter. Barn cat. Food, water and milk. Their free. You'll never see it. Hell... get a few.I need a can of that on a motion detector, under the hood of my tractor. Rats are chewing hoses and wiring as fast as I can fix it.
There used to be a very territorial hundred pound Rottweiler down the street, and the owners didn't care that he could get through the fence and liked standing guard at the end of their driveway. He used to have a big problem with me (I should have shot him when I had a chance to do it with clear justification, but that is a different story).Dogs don't have the same sensitivity to pepper/OC spray. It usually will get them back, but from what I understand it doesn't do much. I have never tried it.
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Yep and you are losing them piece by piece. Once all the less lethal tools are gone the hand wringers are not going to be happy with what's left.Exactly.
Even Tasers don't work on everyone.
It's why we carry so many tools, baton, OC, Taser, pistol with us. It gives officers options to react that keep us safe and keep others safe.
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There used to be a very territorial hundred pound Rottweiler down the street, and the owners didn't care that he could get through the fence and liked standing guard at the end of their driveway. He used to have a big problem with me (I should have shot him when I had a chance to do it with clear justification, but that is a different story).
I started carrying a wimpy can of pepper spray (and had my other hand ready to draw from the holster just in case), and the first time he came out at me I tagged him in the face. The stupid stuff only went about five feet, so things got a little puckered and drawn, but he stopped. Disgusted with that "get off me can", I got a better one (but not much, it only shot a wimpy stream a little over ten feet).
Well the next time I walked down the street and the dog was there, he ran up at me and skidded to a stop six feet away, looking like he knew he'd get me if it weren't for that pain shield he knew was there. So I tagged him in the face again. And again, until he went out of range. He never got closer than about fifteen feet after that. So I guess it does mostly work. I sure wouldn't rely on just it if he had buddies or was in a frenzy though.
I'm partial to hornet spray. Most of the single women I know keep a can on their nightstand.