I follow a local mountain biking group on facebook and this article was recently posted to a popular website by a local CO rider
http://www.singletracks.com/blog/unc...ide-your-bike/
I like the article overall, but I don't know if I agree with the legal reasoning on the author. I am not a lawyer, but I believe you can carry legally with a permit in an open space, state park, or other area with a concealed carry permit. If they make a "no firearms" regulation, I would think the permit would still give you legal authority. Also I don't think the CRS he quotes would cover the legitimate, legal use of a firearm in self defense, whether against human or a mountain lion.
Thoughts?
"Consider local laws–If you are considering a firearm for any reason, know the law.In Colorado, it is illegal to carry in Open Spaces but legal in National Parks. Regulations vary by state, but vary even more widely by municipality. You can actually open carry in much of Colorado, for example, (visible on your hip), but not in cities or municipalities such as Denver (where you can still carry concealed with a permit). Violators are typically punished by fines, but offenses may carry jail time in places such as New York. I cannot condone this personally, but I know riders who say that paying a small fine is preferable to losing their life in a wildlife attack or assault. As adults, I leave it to you to accept the consequences of your decisions, but I suggest following local laws. Here is an example from Jefferson County’s Open Space policy website, which encompasses a dense collection of multi-use trails in the the Colorado front range west of Denver: “Discharging or carrying firearms, crossbows, fireworks, explosives or projectile weapons of any kind are prohibited except as expressly mandated by Article 12 of Title 18 of the Colorado Revised Statutes, as amended.This includes paintball, BB, pellet, air, blow guns, rockets, crossbows, longbows and slingshots ($300 fine).” National parks, Wilderness, BLM, and other open lands have completely different regulations. National Forest Rules generally state the following: “Discharging a firearm is always prohibited within 150 yards of a residence, building, campsite, occupied area, on or across a road, near or across a body of water, in a cave, or in any manner or place whereby any person or property is exposed to injury or damage.”"



Reply With Quote
YES

