Ardent
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
If you actually believe there is not to many wolves in the south I believe you are very uneducated. I would love to see you spew ur rants in a room full of ranchers and hunters. These days in the lower 400 zones you are more likely to call in a wolf or a cat will a elk call. Ranchers are loosing tens of thousands of dollars in lost calves. You can call me uneducated in the issue that's fine but maybe get out of your basement, stop reading the theory and see what's happening to more then just the poor wolves.
I'm a hell of a lot closer to the centre of the argument and more involved than you could suspect, I'm looking at wolves more days of the month than not. How about yourself? The rest of this is said with a warm tone, though text makes it hard to convey that. I expect you’re a bright fellow and also expect you haven’t been exposed to the information, or developed the patience to absorb it. Now forgive me, admittedly you struck a nerve by suggesting I get out of the basement, so I’m going to ask you some questions in return to see how far out of the basement you are yourself, and respond to your assertion from my own position.
As it sounds you do, we also have had a lot of livestock in Alberta, and I still own and lease out a couple properties in the foothills. How many head do you have and where is the land? We have land in 312. People were accustomed to zero predation, and it's returning, humans are the problem there. You can't put meat in a pasture and expect zero losses like the past, unfortunately people became accustomed to that. Now shoot me some referenced predation numbers for the 400's for last year and prove your point on. Members of this forum and coworkers are actively engaged in the aerial tracking, counts, and culls, which is currently running in Alberta around Grande Cache, and now we're starting in BC. Finally, we're talking about bloody Yellowstone and the importance and effects of the reintroduction there from a population of zero; how many cattle are in Yellowstone? These are two different arguments, the health of a park, and the health of livestock where the ecosystem is already destroyed. Every time the good side of wolves is brought up it degenerates into hearsay and predation accusations far from the area the topic is on. It is beyond ridiculous people with near zero practical experience feel qualified to weigh in so staunchly after watching a five minute video, that they decide offends their ideas.
The real issues are more closely related to our love of unsustainable red meat, and the subjugation of wilds to produce it. Yep, the ignorant will turn their heads at this line and balk. I spend a lot of time in Africa and the same thing is happening there at a pace you can barely put into words, the land is utterly destroyed once the cattle take over and pummel it into oblivion. They are poisoning and shooting lions, hyenas, wild dogs, leopards, and cheetahs there too with the same aggravated complaints of livestock losses. I hunted a satellite male lion in the Kalahari last year that had moved to an operation he wasn't supposed to be in, and he was tearing through valuable game animals. Before that I was slated to hunt outside Etosha National Park to push a pride back to the park, they ended up being poisoned before I arrived. These areas are fenced these days, even the parks much of the time, in enormous patches, and do you know what the primary concern is in the Kalahari? It's not keeping the game in, it's keeping the humans and livestock out.
I hunt. I actively kill wolves. And I studied this exact subject way back in university for the grand total of one week, of one class. The science was as compelling then, and as directly correlated, as now. And because of this and the reading this spurred me to since I have a deep appreciation for a proper population of apex predators, now I've said time and again I'm all for wolf management, and other predators clearly too; I've hunted lion, grizzly, wolves, and more. I've worked in the Amazon and seen a jaguar... in a cage. It was an orphan who's mother was killed by farmers who burn the forest to raise a few starving cattle and some root vegetables of near nil nutrition, and talked to mad ranchers. The overwhelming trend I've seen from the Amazon, to Alberta and BC, to Africa is humans are the problem. We're all human and clearly don't advocate human culls, and few seem to see a problem with steak, roast, ribs, or burgers every week. We find a convenient vent in the predators for the frustration, and unfortunately the predators are just being predators, there is nothing intrinsically evil and nefarious about them; it's just survival.
Sadly hunters have wholesale adopted the mindset anything in favour of apex predators is bull####. I’d rather have a full ecosystem to hunt even if it means less elk. I’d also rather have managed wolf populations where necessary than the localized extinctions of woodland caribou, as is happening where I fly helicopters here in northern BC. I’m about to lift off, and I’m sure I’ll see wolves, or at least hoards sign. In one valley last year I watched wolves kill a dozen wood bison in two weeks, that’s excessive, we agree there and the cull is actively going to focus in this region. So to summarize a winding narrative, I am a hunter, I am a conservationist. And I’m all for apex predators and their sensible management. I also see their benefits and believe solid research on improvements to the environments they inhabit and don’t brush it away as hogwash from radicals. You CAN be a hunter and understand all those things, being an outdoorsman does not mean you have to exude ignorance of wolves and any of the benefits they bring. My principle problem with how things are presented on wolves amongst hunters is the “brick wall” mentality where individuals choose to see an issue only one way, without compromise. That is a mark of an individual with little mental capacity to consider problems. I don’t believe anyone here is that guy, so why the #### do so many choose to act like it?
Here's the proverbial two sides of the fence, a photo my wife took in Africa last year. The green side has natural species, including lions and hyenas. Guess what's on the other side? The same story exists anywhere there are apex predators.

Oh Really! The wolves changed the rivers!!!
I guess the change has nothing to do with the forest recovering from the fire of 1988! Sure, the few dozen wolves save a bit of vegetation by equalizing the deer (read elk) population, however the loss of the vegetation is what contributed to the erosion of the hillsides and rivers. The forest is now recovering and so is the vegetation and everything related to the balance of the ecosystem.
I am not against the wolves in any way. They are a vital contribution to the natural balance of the park. The logic of the video just escapes me.
1988 was well over a quarter century ago. Bank foliage grows and rebounds by the season, try mowing a sheet of plywood sized patch on a stream bank one fall and see what you have the next. People routinely plant stabilizing vegetation on steep slopes after new construction, the effect is seen in weeks. The willingness folks have to expunge opinions on gut feel in here is embarrassing.


















































