I have been hunting for 25 years. Areas I have hunted regularly in Manitoba include the east side of lake Winnipeg from Brokenhead Indian reserve up to Manigotagon, including pine falls and Belair forest.
In Saskatchewan I have hunted within a 50 mile radius of saskatoon and in many of the PFRA pastures along the highway 16 latitude from Yorkton and west to Wilkie and in Porcupine forest. In addition I have moved freight along CP north line from Winnipeg to Hardisty, Regina, Nipawin and Lloydmister and many other lines totaling several thousand trips and about 1500 track miles.
I have spent hundreds of days hunting and thousands of hours sometimes hiking many miles off the beaten path, not to mention a couple hundred thousand miles on the vehicle. I also have 3 trail cams on my private hunting preserve on the east side of Lake Manitoba.
I have never seen a wolf. Only prints. This leads me to believe that wolves are not the problem. I would really be interested in hearing someone perspective on the issue who has flown dozens of aerial surveys over thousands of miles of area to educate me on wolf and big game populations. My hypothesis is that low big game populations are not the result of high wolf numbers but rather a combination of human related pressures.
In Saskatchewan I have hunted within a 50 mile radius of saskatoon and in many of the PFRA pastures along the highway 16 latitude from Yorkton and west to Wilkie and in Porcupine forest. In addition I have moved freight along CP north line from Winnipeg to Hardisty, Regina, Nipawin and Lloydmister and many other lines totaling several thousand trips and about 1500 track miles.
I have spent hundreds of days hunting and thousands of hours sometimes hiking many miles off the beaten path, not to mention a couple hundred thousand miles on the vehicle. I also have 3 trail cams on my private hunting preserve on the east side of Lake Manitoba.
I have never seen a wolf. Only prints. This leads me to believe that wolves are not the problem. I would really be interested in hearing someone perspective on the issue who has flown dozens of aerial surveys over thousands of miles of area to educate me on wolf and big game populations. My hypothesis is that low big game populations are not the result of high wolf numbers but rather a combination of human related pressures.

























































