Reimbursement Available To Hunters Who Kill Wolves In Idaho

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Reimbursement Available To Hunters Who Kill Wolves In Idaho

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho officials will make available up to $200,000 to be divided into payments for hunters and trappers who kill wolves in the state through next summer.

The Idaho Department of Fish and Game late last month entered into an agreement with a nonprofit hunting group to reimburse the expenses for a proven kill.

The agreement follows a change in Idaho law aimed at killing more wolves that are blamed for attacking livestock and reducing deer and elk herds. Montana this year also expanded when, where and how wolves can be killed.

The $200,000 to pay for the reimbursement program is coming from licenses and fees paid by hunters to Fish and Game. That money will then be distributed by the state’s Wolf Depredation Control Board in the agreement with the Foundation for Wildlife Management, a hunting group that describes its mission as protecting deer and elk herds.

According the group’s website, the reimbursement program pays $2,500 for killing a wolf in an area where Fish and Game says wolves are chronically preying on livestock. The agency defines that as areas where at least one confirmed or probable livestock depredation has occurred each year for five years.

The group is paying $2,000 per wolf in hunting units where Fish and Game says predators are keeping elk from meeting management objectives. Hunters will get $1,000 per wolf in the northern tip of the state, and $500 elsewhere. The group notes reimbursements will be cut significantly if the money starts running out before June 2022.

https://denver.cbslocal.com/2021/10/11/reimbursement-gray-wolves-idaho/
 
Trapper's association here used to pay at one time, think I made 200. , I thought I did well. :redface: It was a real incentive to get out and hunt them.

Grizz
 
several years ago the cattlemen's association up north eastern BC were paying upwards of 850 a wolf. This according to a young gas plant worker I met who drove around checking wells all day. He had 2 in the back of his pickup and we met another older fella hunting in a ghillie suit on the grassy slopes and we thought he was elk hunting. He had lots of pics of wolves he had taken and he told a similar story as the young gas worker. He sure was a big help putting us on a small pocket of elk i the area too ;)
 
they re doing that here from some first nation offices as well the outfitter association but they do not too much publicize it because of the amount of antis we re getting up here ...
 
they re doing that here from some first nation offices as well the outfitter association but they do not too much publicize it because of the amount of antis we re getting up here ...

I still fondly recall Paul Watson et al (Sea Shepherd) rode into town to save the wolves.
I was living in Inuvik at the time, and had a good buddy involved with the culls.
No-one in Whitehorse would supply them with gas or groceries.
They saddled up anyway, rode their few snow machines into the bush, hundreds of miles from the actual activity site, and set up the making of their "documentary". A rather short lived one after frostbite set in, and they ended up running home to warmer climes with their tail between their legs...

Ah, the good old days...

Cheers,
Nog
 
Wolves have been around for hundreds of thousands of years. They're part of the ecosystem. If your worried about killing less deer, elk or moose. I think poachers and growing human population are your big problem. Keep your old school thinking mentality.

I never hear much about poaching its a real problem that's ignored. Very few game wardens and tons of land to cover.

One of the guys I worked with use to bait deer in and he shoot them at night with a crossbow all the time. Him and his family would kill dozens every year this way. I wasn't to impressed. This stuff happens all the time no one ever comes around and checks.
 
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