I stumbled upon this in my wanderings, and thought it might be of interest to some here, especially since some of you deal with bears more than I've had to:<br><br>http://www.backpacker.com/technique/article/0,1026,1647,00.html<br><br>Many years ago, I had a bright blue tent robbed while I was on a side hike because it stood out on the Appalacian Trail in October like a sore thumb- literally visible from a half-mile or so, which takes some doing in that densely wooded country. Aside from civilized considerations like expense, finishing a hike with half the gear you expected to have is an eye opener.<br><br>Since then I've made it a practice to have everything I carry (that's too large to stick in a pocket or lose in the underbrush) in subdued colors whenever possible, with one large exception for emergencies. It's much easier to make a camp of subdued equipment visible in an emergency than it is to make a camp of loud-colored equipment invisible. There have been many times when I've been glad of the practice since, for a variety of reasons, some unexpected... and several times when other people were so close that I couldn't believe they didn't see me.<br><br>I have some actual camouflage gear- pack cover, tent fly, tarps- but it does seem to put people off when used anywhere but in true wilderness. I'm sure it's the cultural demonizing of "survivalists", and thus probably more true in the East than the West. It's hard to come up with an objective reason why it should be viewed as threatening.<br><br>There was, I admit, one instance where I went on a brief side trip to get water without my pack (it was hundreds of feet below), used the camouflage pack cover to keep from being robbed again, and had some trouble finding it when I got back. It's easy to assume, somehow, that your own camouflage won't work on YOU...<br>