Wolves: Kill 'Em All

Demonical

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
22   0   0
http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/25/us/wyoming-wolf-pack-elk-slaughter/index.html

(CNN)In what appears to be a case of "sport killing," a pack of wolves slaughtered a herd of elk in one night, Wyoming wildlife officials said Friday.
Nineteen elk, mostly calves, were found dead several days ago at a feeding ground near Bondurant, a town southeast of Jackson, said John Lund of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department. A contractor delivering feed to the herd discovered the dead animals.

Lund said wildlife officials are concerned because wolves usually eat what they kill or come back later to feed.
"It appears to be sport killing," he said. The pack suspected of killing the elks has nine wolves, he added.
There are about 1,100 elk in the area, he said, and about 7% of the population has been lost to wolves this winter.
"There is a significant concern among wildlife managers," he said, noting that there are no reports of wolves attacking humans. "Our concern is big game."
But there's nothing the state agency can do, he said. Wolves are federally protected and managed.
In 2012, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service planned to take wolves off the endangered list and turn over management of the animals to Wyoming, according to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department website. That would have allowed state-regulated hunting of wolves.
But a federal judge ruled in 2014 that wolves remain under federal control and be relisted as an endangered species.
The federal agency could kill wolves that are attacking livestock but not wildlife, said Mike Jiminez, the wildlife service's Northern Rocky Mountain Wolf coordinator, according to the Casper Star Tribune.
Wolves, once nearly extinct, were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park in the mid-1990s, according to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department website. The number of wolves grew and spread across the region.
 
Well, I can't help Wyoming, but I have my .257 Roberts tuned up for a wolf hunting trip next weekend... I will do my best to help Nor Ont moose...
 
Kinda knocks a hole in the simplistic theory that preditors 'only kill to eat'....anybody who has their whole flock of chickens killed by mink know some preditors kill just for the fun of it and wolves aren't probably much diferent
 
Don't know much about Wolves , but watch a documentary and was surprised at the amount of pups and survivable ETA per littler.
Looks like if hunting is good for the pack they breed like crazy.
 
Wolves are an apex predator just like us and because of this kill, there are going to be a whole lot of other critters that are going to eat well for the next while. They are fascinating creatures really and are a truly necessary part of the biosphere.
 
This has been going on for years. We had a thread on it a few years back. I remember talking about this with a wolf lover. He started to get all choked up and weepy sounding near the end. Should have bought himself a nice furry wolf doll and worshiped that instead.
 
I for one do not like the title of this thread. Predator control is our duty but to "Kill 'em All" is how we got to the place in the late 1800s where the fathers of conservation began to act to save what was left of our wildlife. Wolves are necessary. Too many is not good, none is much worse.
 
I for one do not like the title of this thread. Predator control is our duty but to "Kill 'em All" is how we got to the place in the late 1800s where the fathers of conservation began to act to save what was left of our wildlife. Wolves are necessary. Too many is not good, none is much worse.

Yeah, "Kill 'Em All" and "Ban 'Em All" come from exactly the same stupid place.
 
I disagree with the "kill em all" philosophy, but extended open seasons, and even bounties are quite appropriate where wolf populations are a bit too healthy. I prefer to see wolves treated as game animals, with season length, license fees, and bag limits that encourage a balanced harvest. All large predators kill for fun (have you ever seen video of a killer whale playing with a seal) killing is how predators survive, and they do so with enthusiasm.
 
Wolves only kill to eat, so I conclude those must have been werewolves. What has become of Team Jacob since the series ended?

cou:
 
wolf sightings are pretty rare, well for us anyway! My oldest son and I once saw a white wolf, pretty safe to say that was a once in a life time experience for us, although, you never know. We were sitting in my van off to the side of a logging road having lunch, when a big doe crossed the road ahead on the run, a moment or two later a typical color wolf crossed chasing after the doe, a good half min later a large white head appeared above the tall grass on the edge of the road, it looked both ways and paused a few moments and then crossed, man, I could hardy believe the size of that all white wolf! We do see a fair amount of wolf tracks around, but never what made them!
 
I for one do not like the title of this thread. Predator control is our duty but to "Kill 'em All" is how we got to the place in the late 1800s where the fathers of conservation began to act to save what was left of our wildlife. Wolves are necessary. Too many is not good, none is much worse.


"Kill 'em All" A comment from the well informed,
 
I was turned off of the coyote hunt early on largely because of how all of my hunting buddies went on at length about their status as pests, vermin etc, etc. To hunt to eradicate pests at a high volume just did not really motivate me, despite knowing the validity of the concerns with a large population. It was just too easy to set up a call and watch for magpies/crows and I am not an exterminator. The "gopher patch mentality" is just not something that holds my interest for long.

The wolf hunts always interested me because it was a predator that did not just come in to the call every time and took a lot more from the hunter to create opportunities. Lots of fresh sign often still ends with no sighting and I smile to myself when I picture them circling downwind and being cautious. The amount of respect I have for the wolves is what makes it interesting and challenging to hunt them.

I understand the concerns with strong predator populations and do not really take issue with anyone who takes the stance that volume is the goal, however, I view them the same way I do big game animals: a respected challenge, with a beauty to enjoy.
 
Back
Top Bottom