Twenty five dead (coyotes) wolves pic - question

Smokepole

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This may have been posted before, but I couldn't find it in a search.
Does anyone know what the real story behind this photo is? I understand it has been going around for a while with several stories.

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The story I heard the most was it was from Manitoba and they were shot just by tracking them with snowmobiles.


I really don't know though, I'd like to know what province is tracking them with the collars on a few of them dogs....
 
These are coyotes from the Gisborne Lake area of southeastern Newfoundland, taken in March 2007, and yes, these were mostly taken from tracking on snowmobiles.

We've been collaring some in relation to ongoing caribou calf predation research.

(Interesting that folks from out West would mistake them for wolves. They do tend to have that 'wolfish' look.)
 
A couple in the front look wolfish...but most of them look like coyotes. Here in Alberta the Gov. has collared a wolf or wolves and when they figure that wolf is packed up, a helicopter is sent out to shoot the pack but leave the collared one alive to serve the same purpose over again. Maybe this picture is of something similar...but I guess they wanted their collars back this time :).
 
Me and a buddy of mine (he's on the right) were out ice fishing on Montreal Lake back in Jan 2008 and this pack of ravenous coyotes came out on the ice. It had been a particularly bad winter with a lot of snow (as you can see) and they hadn't been doing too well. Luckily we both had rifles and managed to bring them all down except for two stragglers who high tailed it out of Dodge. Maybe they were after our fish guts. I guess I'll never know the answer to that one.
 
These coywolves were taken in the winter of 2006 in Northern Ontario... they were snared, not shot... I am on the right and my partner Jimmy is on the left... the licence plate on Jimmy's truck is K5V 7L5... it was such a good haul, because these mutts had a herd of woodland caribou isolated in a ravine and had been picking them off one at a time for three weeks... when we found the situation, we decided to take a hand in "tweaking" Mother Nature's balance.
 
These coywolves were taken in the winter of 2006 in Northern Ontario... they were snared, not shot... I am on the right and my partner Jimmy is on the left... the licence plate on Jimmy's truck is K5V 7L5... it was such a good haul, because these mutts had a herd of woodland caribou isolated in a ravine and had been picking them off one at a time for three weeks... when we found the situation, we decided to take a hand in "tweaking" Mother Nature's balance.

Do you have more pics of this tally?
 
These coywolves were taken in the winter of 2006 in Northern Ontario... they were snared, not shot... I am on the right and my partner Jimmy is on the left... the licence plate on Jimmy's truck is K5V 7L5... it was such a good haul, because these mutts had a herd of woodland caribou isolated in a ravine and had been picking them off one at a time for three weeks... when we found the situation, we decided to take a hand in "tweaking" Mother Nature's balance.
Great job. Would love to see more pics?
 
And Bob is your uncle.
These coywolves were taken in the winter of 2006 in Northern Ontario... they were snared, not shot... I am on the right and my partner Jimmy is on the left... the licence plate on Jimmy's truck is K5V 7L5... it was such a good haul, because these mutts had a herd of woodland caribou isolated in a ravine and had been picking them off one at a time for three weeks... when we found the situation, we decided to take a hand in "tweaking" Mother Nature's balance.
 
These coywolves were taken in the winter of 2006 in Northern Ontario... they were snared, not shot... I am on the right and my partner Jimmy is on the left... the licence plate on Jimmy's truck is K5V 7L5... it was such a good haul, because these mutts had a herd of woodland caribou isolated in a ravine and had been picking them off one at a time for three weeks... when we found the situation, we decided to take a hand in "tweaking" Mother Nature's balance.


Two coyotes in front wearing tracking collars
 
I and my hunting bud used the Vulcan Mind Meld to put them to sleep for this picture,no animals were actually injured, this a depiction only of what is possible with the power of the mind!!
 
Two coyotes in front wearing tracking collars

Hey, maybe they were Northern Sask's version of a St.Bernard and they thought me and my buddy were in trouble and were actually coming to save us when we killed them all. Ooops.:redface:
 
These are coyotes from the Gisborne Lake area of southeastern Newfoundland, taken in March 2007, and yes, these were mostly taken from tracking on snowmobiles. We've been collaring some in relation to ongoing caribou calf predation research. (Interesting that folks from out West would mistake them for wolves. They do tend to have that 'wolfish' look.)

This is the correct story, I can assure you of that.
 
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