Wolves in B.C.

wolves and ticks have wasted vaste multitudes of deer and moose here in prince geroge in the last few winters.mild weather allows ticks to prosper and the melts and freezing causes a crust to form for which predators can traverse yet ungulates sink through.i have 3 packs in my area,salmon valley north.i have seen a couple over the last few years...other than the 8 i had in my backyard monday heres some picts http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php?t=201215
 
Last edited:
How does that work? Are you able to explain?

basically the more predators you kill makes for more prey available and more terrritory for another predator to hunt in. That makes for healthier predators which have larger litters of pups and more predators out there the next year.
 
Lets just remember, before all the fear-mongering and outright lies come out in even more force, that there has been 1, repeat, 1 fatal wolf attack in Canada since we started actually recording and investigating such attacks. The wolves involved in that attack had been habituated by a garbage dump, and he was walking alone at night.

As for the "1 dead wolf = 20 more deer for us to shoot" thats total bull. Do you actually know what wolves eat? try examining some wolf crap you find, its not usually chock full of moose hair and wedding rings, its a mixture, a lot of small bones, mostly mice, some rabbit maybe, if the pack is lucky maybe some deer hair might be evident. Do wolves eat deer, yes, mostly sick, and old, or young and slow. Do wolves eat moose and elk, see " eat deer". Do wolves kill cattle, sometimes, kinda the same behavior though with deer, old or young, sick and slow. Most cattle kills have some special circumstance's to them as well, ie calving, or new born, or maybe an injury. Also, farmers that find a dead cow, that could have died from any number of ailments or circumstances, that the coyotes have then been chewing on for a night, blame it on the evil wolves. "Killed 10 cows last night I tell ya what, ripped the throats out, drank there blood, and left them there, golly, better start shooting every canine like creature i see!" For lack of deer see winterkill.

Now i get to watch the flames roll in.
You gotta get out more Pal.
Up here , an old wolf that can't keep up with the pack and got himself kicked out , is emaciated, and barely able to survive as a wolf, can - and has, killed full grown guard dogs, including german sheapards and rottweilers.
They kill anything and everything they need to survive.
two wolves can bring down a full grown bull moose without too much hassle, but it takes them a bit of time, of which they have lots of!
They'll hamstring it slowly, untlill it has to stop, then the carnage begins.

it's not pretty, but it is effective.
I've seen this first hand , by the way, not read it in some book or seen it in a movie.
Cat
 
I don't understand why these 'wolf lovers' think there is no problem with wolves and they just eat mice and rabbits. They are very efficient hunters and killers that will often kill just for the sake of killing.
 
Wolves have moved into two areas that i have been hunting for years. Never heard them or seen them before. coyotes.... yes.... but wolves.... this year in both places..... lots of wolf scat, big tracks and they were very vocal at night. I had to drag a deer out in record time this season as the wolves could be heard at dusk.... a few hundred yards out. Looks like i'm adding critters with fur and fangs to my hunting escapades in the future.
 
I have a story about the mouse and rabbit eating wolf. In 1989 while moose hunting in the area north of Smoking Tent, Sk I came on an ugly sight. 2 wolves were basically eating on a Charlois bull in a clearing, while the bull was still alive. I shot 1 but missed the other. They were only about 40 steps away. The bull had bad foot rot and was in poor shape. The cute little puppies had been chewing on the hind end, and this had been going on for awhile. While the wolves were only doing what is natural, the grizzly sight was definatly not the Walt Disney wolf that maltextract refers to .Mark
 
Last edited:
I have a story about the mouse and rabbit eating wolf. In 1989 while moose hunting in the area north of Smoking Tent, Sk I came on an ugly sight. 2 wolves were basically eating on a Charlois bull in a clearing, while the bull was still alive. I shot 1 but missed the other. They were only about 40 steps away. The bull had bad foot rot and was in poor shape. The cute little puppies had been chewing on the hind end, and this had been going on for awhile. While the wolves were only doing what is natural, the grizzly sight was definatly not the Walt Disney wolf that maltextract refers to .Mark


this is to often true in the real world My grandparents had a large cattle ranch in the Tatlyoko Valley in BC there I saw the rectums chewed out of yearling calves and cows then they would go after another they might kill one and mangle three or four all healty animals this usially ocured in the late summer when the wolves were teaching the pups how to hunt. I shoot every wolve I get the chance to but that is not meny 6 so far on My parents ranch we have not lost to meny cows to wolves but still have lost a few 1 every 3 or 4 years for a few years we were having more trouble with the grizlies that they say are going extinct yet we see more now than 30 years ago when we move out to the ranch.
some one was asking how big the wolves get in BC I shot one that wieghed in at around 175lb and one was shot this year by one of my cusins that wieghed over 200 and it was a female. they probibly average 125 to 150lb for the adults
 
How big/heavy are they in BC?

Average Males.............100-150 lbs females abit less.......80-120 lbs.

This is the Current BC No 1 Wolf in the Record books......it weighed 130 lbs.
A 200 lb Wolf would be quite the sight ! ;)
bc1wolf2252.jpg
 
I will see what I can do about getting pictures and wieghts it was shot not long ago so no pups in her they do not have a phone so tqkes a bit to get ahold of him
 
just talked to my brother about the big female that my cousin shot (he lives close to my cousin) and he told me that it was only about a 130 lb and the fellow that told me it was 200 kind of over judged it so sorry about that :(
 
this has been argued 100X over on CGN, and that pic of the hung super dog is just handitarded, what is that guy a 30lb midget ?

the following pics are from spatzizi park in northern BC, the links to the pics are from a anti hunting website as the actual outfitter that took the wolves is out of buisness now.

this dog was 144
wwolf5.jpg


this one was 140 as well
wwd.jpg


qoute from the outfitter:
With large populations of Moose and Mountain Caribou these Timber Wolves thrive in our hunting area. The average Timber Wolf weighs approximately one-hundred and forty pounds."

I am NOT saying every wolf is size large by huge by any means but there are some places in northern BC were they get huge, and the average hunter will never get to them do to the stupid high costs of fly in hunts.

here is a couple from northern Alberta
wolf55.jpg


yes the pic is set up and the guy is standing back a ways, obviously, but the outfitter brags wolves in the 200 pound range.

I have seen several over 140lb class and a couple in the 175 class, just because you havent seen it dosnt make it impossible, just means you havent looked hard nuff ;)
 
couple more wolf pics

this is the first wolf that I shot when I was 16

scan0001.jpg


this wolf wieghed the same as me and at that time I wieghed 165 to 170 the biggest that I have taken

scan0002.jpg
 
Thought since you all been talking bout wolves in BC and the poster mentioned specifically Clearwater and Little Fort I would post these pics. All took in the area mentioned the past couple weeks. All wolf kills very close to town.

IMG_0565.jpg


IMG_0613.jpg


IMG_0616.jpg


IMG_0620.jpg


IMG_0621.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom