Free: Contests & Raffles.
If it is OK to bring back the Wolf, wouldn't if be right if the Grizzly Bear also be brought back also? After all they both lived in peace and harmony together in the past.
Quote from: flatbkman on June 10, 2013, 07:32:54 AMIf it is OK to bring back the Wolf, wouldn't if be right if the Grizzly Bear also be brought back also? After all they both lived in peace and harmony together in the past.Don't forget bison.
If wolves are so necessary to have, then so should bison. It doesn't make any sense to restore one and not the other. Besides, bison would be another species for the wolves to eat. You'd think the wolf lovers would be all for that.
"Maggie Howell of the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, New York, said the Adirondack Mountains and other parts of the Northeast are "screaming for a predator like the wolf" to thin an out-of-control deer herd.Ashe, however, said it's unrealistic to think wolves can return to all or even most of their former range, even if scientifically feasible."The wolves can make it to any state the same way they "migrated" from Alberta in 1995&96. Environmental groups just won't be able to make as much money if wolves are not listed as endangered.
They would love that! These anti-human pieces of trash cant wait to see an un-armed, tofu eating society being mauled to death by wolves....As long as fido and fifi are safe, they dont care who dies.
Quote from: bobcat on June 10, 2013, 04:56:49 PMIf wolves are so necessary to have, then so should bison. It doesn't make any sense to restore one and not the other. Besides, bison would be another species for the wolves to eat. You'd think the wolf lovers would be all for that. There are a lot of people who would like to restore bison to parts of their historic range. It really is a shame that they are confined to Yellowstone and one or two other small areas. Very few wolves in the lower 48 have adapted to hunting bison. Once in a while a pack gets pretty good at going after them up in the Hayden Valley, but they still take a beating nonetheless. People seem so worried that wolves are part of an agenda to end public lands ranching. I've always disagreed with that theory. If folks want to try and end public lands ranching in wide swaths of Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, eastern Oregon, Utah, Colorado, etc., the bison would be the animal to do it with. Bison reintroduction is so controversial in western states (excluding WA because we were never part of their historic range), that even most hardcore NGO's aren't willing to waste money on the issue yet, with the exception of Buffalo Feild Campaign and a couple of others.