Free: Contests & Raffles.
Wolf haven was very busy this year. Rick
Quote from: dreamunelk on December 07, 2012, 06:37:27 PMQuote from: CementFinisher on December 07, 2012, 06:29:54 PMThe state did not. period. however i dont think its to far of a stretch that wolf groups are realeasing them and hybrids. The state cannot and will not release wolves with out going through the full process. What that entails I do not know. But, just think about all they went through to release pronghorns and never could! I think there is several threads on here about the release of the speed goats!
Quote from: CementFinisher on December 07, 2012, 06:29:54 PMThe state did not. period. however i dont think its to far of a stretch that wolf groups are realeasing them and hybrids. The state cannot and will not release wolves with out going through the full process. What that entails I do not know. But, just think about all they went through to release pronghorns and never could!
The state did not. period. however i dont think its to far of a stretch that wolf groups are realeasing them and hybrids.
What is interesting is that I spend a lot of time in the Willapa hills, and I can remember as a kid sitting in the yard at dark and hearing howling... Not coyote howling and yipping, but honest to goodness howling. My grandfather would always sit and listen talk about them not being coyotes, and him being someone who was familiar with both, I was and still am inclined to believe him. I only heard them for about 2 years, and I haven't heard the same howling since. Lots of yotes still, but never what drawn out wolf howl that I used to hear. This was probably 1994-1995ish...The rumor (read as RUMOR) was that deer and elk where doing significant damage to the new reprod in the area, and Weyerhaeuser had let some "big coyotes" go in the area... While this was always a RUMOR, I did hear it from several people in the area...
don't think id buy into Weyerhaeuser transplanting.