Free: Contests & Raffles.
The reason they didn't shoot it again was to keep from adding holes in the pelt which would devalue the pelt. I'm sure those guys are fairly conservative when it comes to wasting money. Trappers know the value of a clean hide.
as long as the wolf huggers hold out on allowing management the more hate will be created in rural areas as unmanaged wolves kill livestock and game herds. The wolf lovers are now probably the wolf's worst enemy in America.
Quote from: bearpaw on August 13, 2013, 09:22:31 PM as long as the wolf huggers hold out on allowing management the more hate will be created in rural areas as unmanaged wolves kill livestock and game herds. The wolf lovers are now probably the wolf's worst enemy in America. True. One of the justifications for allowing a wolf hunt in parts of the Midwest that I've seen from wildlife biologists out there is it will help people get over their fear of them and give them a sense of the control over the situation. The problem here as I see it is let's be honest, they were never wanted in areas where livestock roam and a lot of hunters didn't want them either. The moment one wolf walked into/was released/or whatever anyone wants to believe the state people wanted a season on them. No bio in this state was going to agree with that and I have a gut feeling that the general attitude west of the mountains at WDFW is one of "oh those people, they have been crying wolf and wanting to shoot them since before they were released. Ignore them." Because of that you now have a perfect storm.
Quote from: AspenBud on August 14, 2013, 09:30:41 AMQuote from: bearpaw on August 13, 2013, 09:22:31 PM as long as the wolf huggers hold out on allowing management the more hate will be created in rural areas as unmanaged wolves kill livestock and game herds. The wolf lovers are now probably the wolf's worst enemy in America. True. One of the justifications for allowing a wolf hunt in parts of the Midwest that I've seen from wildlife biologists out there is it will help people get over their fear of them and give them a sense of the control over the situation. The problem here as I see it is let's be honest, they were never wanted in areas where livestock roam and a lot of hunters didn't want them either. The moment one wolf walked into/was released/or whatever anyone wants to believe the state people wanted a season on them. No bio in this state was going to agree with that and I have a gut feeling that the general attitude west of the mountains at WDFW is one of "oh those people, they have been crying wolf and wanting to shoot them since before they were released. Ignore them." Because of that you now have a perfect storm.Of course they weren't wanted because everyone knew exactly what would happen and now it's been proven true by the agencies, a lack of management. I think people in rural areas would put up with a reasonable number of wolves mostly in remote areas that don't impact livestock growers or decimate game herds. The WDFW seems to have taken a position that wolves are more important than other wildlife, that rural Washington is stuck with however many wolves can breed, game herd reductions and livestock depredation seem to be of little importance to WDFW, and NE WA is stuck with whatever happens due to these rapidly expanding wolf packs. To add insult to injury, WDFW shows up in Colville with a rehearsed generic message that stunk, they had no answers for the hard questions about how they were going to deal with the expanding wolf population in NE WA nor did they answer the question I posed asking about future hunter opportunity with the increased predation on herds. WDFW seemed to expect local people to fall in line like a bunch of uneducated subjects of the state. Until WDFW realizes they work for all people (not just Conservation Northwest) and that they should manage all wildlife equally (not just potect wolves), I doubt they will get much public support in NE Washington.
Quote from: bearpaw on August 14, 2013, 02:07:37 PMQuote from: AspenBud on August 14, 2013, 09:30:41 AMQuote from: bearpaw on August 13, 2013, 09:22:31 PM as long as the wolf huggers hold out on allowing management the more hate will be created in rural areas as unmanaged wolves kill livestock and game herds. The wolf lovers are now probably the wolf's worst enemy in America. True. One of the justifications for allowing a wolf hunt in parts of the Midwest that I've seen from wildlife biologists out there is it will help people get over their fear of them and give them a sense of the control over the situation. The problem here as I see it is let's be honest, they were never wanted in areas where livestock roam and a lot of hunters didn't want them either. The moment one wolf walked into/was released/or whatever anyone wants to believe the state people wanted a season on them. No bio in this state was going to agree with that and I have a gut feeling that the general attitude west of the mountains at WDFW is one of "oh those people, they have been crying wolf and wanting to shoot them since before they were released. Ignore them." Because of that you now have a perfect storm.Of course they weren't wanted because everyone knew exactly what would happen and now it's been proven true by the agencies, a lack of management. I think people in rural areas would put up with a reasonable number of wolves mostly in remote areas that don't impact livestock growers or decimate game herds. The WDFW seems to have taken a position that wolves are more important than other wildlife, that rural Washington is stuck with however many wolves can breed, game herd reductions and livestock depredation seem to be of little importance to WDFW, and NE WA is stuck with whatever happens due to these rapidly expanding wolf packs. To add insult to injury, WDFW shows up in Colville with a rehearsed generic message that stunk, they had no answers for the hard questions about how they were going to deal with the expanding wolf population in NE WA nor did they answer the question I posed asking about future hunter opportunity with the increased predation on herds. WDFW seemed to expect local people to fall in line like a bunch of uneducated subjects of the state. Until WDFW realizes they work for all people (not just Conservation Northwest) and that they should manage all wildlife equally (not just potect wolves), I doubt they will get much public support in NE Washington.It's not a question of management or of science. It's completely political and the governor, then Gregoire and now Inslee, panders to the whining Seattle/Tacoma and Olympia liberals instead of making common sense changes to the failing wolf plan. They don't care about you, Dale and all E. Washingtonians, and that is passed down from the top to the DFW, even if the DFW wanted to do something about - and they don't. The votes that keep these cretins in office don't come from the east.
I disagree. McKenna is a no-nonsense kind of guy.
The reason they didn't shoot it again was to keep from adding holes in the pelt which would devalue the pelt. I'm sure those guys are fairly conservative when it comes to wasting money. Trappers know the value of a clean hide.Trapping involves wounding an animal with a gun and chasing it down with a truck? If you're concerned about the pelt, blowing apart an animal like that and then letting it run for nearly 5 minutes isn't a good way to preserve it. If the animal was actually trapped, and it wasn't in that video, a shot to the head or a long handled club to the head would do the job.
Quote from: pianoman9701 on August 14, 2013, 02:16:38 PMQuote from: bearpaw on August 14, 2013, 02:07:37 PMQuote from: AspenBud on August 14, 2013, 09:30:41 AMQuote from: bearpaw on August 13, 2013, 09:22:31 PM as long as the wolf huggers hold out on allowing management the more hate will be created in rural areas as unmanaged wolves kill livestock and game herds. The wolf lovers are now probably the wolf's worst enemy in America. True. One of the justifications for allowing a wolf hunt in parts of the Midwest that I've seen from wildlife biologists out there is it will help people get over their fear of them and give them a sense of the control over the situation. The problem here as I see it is let's be honest, they were never wanted in areas where livestock roam and a lot of hunters didn't want them either. The moment one wolf walked into/was released/or whatever anyone wants to believe the state people wanted a season on them. No bio in this state was going to agree with that and I have a gut feeling that the general attitude west of the mountains at WDFW is one of "oh those people, they have been crying wolf and wanting to shoot them since before they were released. Ignore them." Because of that you now have a perfect storm.Of course they weren't wanted because everyone knew exactly what would happen and now it's been proven true by the agencies, a lack of management. I think people in rural areas would put up with a reasonable number of wolves mostly in remote areas that don't impact livestock growers or decimate game herds. The WDFW seems to have taken a position that wolves are more important than other wildlife, that rural Washington is stuck with however many wolves can breed, game herd reductions and livestock depredation seem to be of little importance to WDFW, and NE WA is stuck with whatever happens due to these rapidly expanding wolf packs. To add insult to injury, WDFW shows up in Colville with a rehearsed generic message that stunk, they had no answers for the hard questions about how they were going to deal with the expanding wolf population in NE WA nor did they answer the question I posed asking about future hunter opportunity with the increased predation on herds. WDFW seemed to expect local people to fall in line like a bunch of uneducated subjects of the state. Until WDFW realizes they work for all people (not just Conservation Northwest) and that they should manage all wildlife equally (not just potect wolves), I doubt they will get much public support in NE Washington.It's not a question of management or of science. It's completely political and the governor, then Gregoire and now Inslee, panders to the whining Seattle/Tacoma and Olympia liberals instead of making common sense changes to the failing wolf plan. They don't care about you, Dale and all E. Washingtonians, and that is passed down from the top to the DFW, even if the DFW wanted to do something about - and they don't. The votes that keep these cretins in office don't come from the east.I'm not sure if either of the last two Republican gubernatorial candidates would have made much of a difference on the issue either. Both were from the Seattle area and both knew where the votes come from.