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PEPPER
SPRAY'S STRENGTH NOTHING TO SNEEZE AT!
ATLANTA
30306: Personal Safety Column
Theyre
red hot, and theyll make you swoon. No, its not a new rock
band. Im talking about pepper sprays popular non-lethal devices
that many women carry but few are trained to use. As with any weapon,
there are subtleties and limitations, distinct pros and cons to their
usage. You dont just give a spritz and presto! the bad guys
drop at your feet.
Far
more effective than tear gas (Mace), pepper spray contains a solution
of oleoresin capsicum, better know as cayenne pepper, which is derived
from red pepper plants. These O.C-based sprays are an inflammatory agent
and can disable an individual for 20-30 minutes. When a person is sprayed
in the face, the air passages and membranes swell, making it difficult
to breathe. The spray typically produces intense choking, burning in the
throat, face and eyes, and instant eye closure. It can also force the
diaphragm to contract and cause an attacker to double over. Its
like putting your hand on a hot stove and not being able to take it off,
notes a Denver police officer. The pain keeps intensifying.
O.C. manufacturers
even boast that it works on dogs, bears (its used in Canada as bear
defense) and druggies- those in chemically altered states.
But pepper
sprays are not foolproof; they do not necessarily stop an attacker
instantly as many product pushers would like us to believe.
For example,
after reading the literature and viewing videotapes of fellow officers
being sprayed by each other, Oregon officer Frank Ward was convinced of
O.Cs effectiveness. Tragically, two weeks later he bet his life
on his pepper spray and lost it in a brutal beating. He was found gasping
in a room filled with O.Cs chemical smell with, what one report
called, a death grip on his pepper spray.
Tests conducted
by Modern Warrior, a well respected New York-based self defense and police
training organization, found that many individuals intent on violence
were able to continue attacking, at least for some seconds, in spite of
being sprayed. Similar tests conducted by law enforcement agencies concurred:
Determined assailants with violent goals can work through the sprays
and delay the reactions. In other words, they may be able to continue
attacking long enough to inflict serious harm.
In the seconds
or longer that pepper spray might take to work, you must be prepared to
follow up with further action, be it quickly getting away, initiating
a counterattack with body-based skills, or moving from side-to-side while
spraying the attackers face repeatedly. Simply standing in place
is dangerous not to mention stupid; a shut-eyed assailant or criminal
will likely strike or slash where he last saw you.
Before you
use pepper spray, you need to know that sprays are dispersed differently.
Stream patterns, for example, discharge the largest droplets and can be
used at a range of up to 20 feet. A steam is the most resistant to gusts
of wind and is well suited for outdoor use. But because it is a narrower
spray pattern, the targeting must be precise.
Cone shaped
mists disperse a wider protective barrier, but are less resistant to wind.
Better suited for indoor use, their ideal range is four to six feet -
thats about two arm lengths.
Burst or
fogger units discharge a wider pattern and also cover a longer range.
But the number of shots in a fogger canister is usually less
than the number of bursts in a stream or mist model.
Sprays are
also rated according to their potency (rated in Scoville Heat Units or
SHUs) and their percentage of O.C. Generally, a 5 to 10 percent
solution with an SHU rating of two million is advisable.
For home
defense, you might want to attach an O.C. canister with Velcro to a closet
wall or other handy spot naturally away from children and imbecile
guests. Just make sure you dont confuse it for room deodorizer or
low-fat cooking spray. Thats one Mexican dish youll never
forget!
Be sure
to purchase your pepper spray from a reputable and knowledgeable source
preferably one who can provide hands-on training. Otherwise, consider
buying an inert canister and practicing with a trusted friend. Take it
seriously dont point it at your in-laws. Remember: its
a weapon. (In some states, you must have a registered FID card to own
pepper spray; so check with your local authorities.)
Finally,
keep in mind that no hand-held device is a substitute for physical self-defense
training. Women are often attacked when they least expect it, and by people
they know and trust: A woman may be asleep, tending to her children, or
biting into her burger when violence strikes. How likely is it that in
these moments her finger will be poised on the nozzle of her pepper spray,
or for that matter, the trigger of her pistol?
The more
tools the better, but lets not forget: There is no magic bullet.
It comes down to this: You ARE the weapon.
END
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