Free: Contests & Raffles.
The green river serial killer was a rarity, but it was still necessary to take him off the streets.
Quote from: bearpaw on January 06, 2014, 09:12:17 AMThe green river serial killer was a rarity, but it was still necessary to take him off the streets.Yea...I don't equate wolves to psychopathic people who murder humans for pleasure.
Wolves are capable of killing people. No doubt about it. My encounters with wolves at close range (under 100 yards) while bowhunting, had me wishing I was carrying a handgun. However, if I were going to put together a list of things were likely to cause injury/death to me as an outdoorsman, I don't think wolves (whether in Idaho, Washington, Alaska, Montana etc.) would make the top 50...or maybe even the top 100.
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 06, 2014, 07:45:37 AMWolves are capable of killing people. No doubt about it. My encounters with wolves at close range (under 100 yards) while bowhunting, had me wishing I was carrying a handgun. However, if I were going to put together a list of things were likely to cause injury/death to me as an outdoorsman, I don't think wolves (whether in Idaho, Washington, Alaska, Montana etc.) would make the top 50...or maybe even the top 100. What a load of el torro caca!
Quote from: turkeyfeather on January 06, 2014, 11:35:21 AMQuote from: idahohuntr on January 06, 2014, 07:45:37 AMWolves are capable of killing people. No doubt about it. My encounters with wolves at close range (under 100 yards) while bowhunting, had me wishing I was carrying a handgun. However, if I were going to put together a list of things were likely to cause injury/death to me as an outdoorsman, I don't think wolves (whether in Idaho, Washington, Alaska, Montana etc.) would make the top 50...or maybe even the top 100. What a load of el torro caca! Well he's got a point statistically speaking, he's much more likely to fall from his tree stand or get lost and die in the elements. There's millions of ways to die while hunting and wolves are very far down that list. I think it's incredibly selfish to not carry a handgun though. I think it is unconscionable to have a wolf encounter end with a favorable outcome to the wolves. If someone is camping and the wolf is allowed to rummage through a cooler, then next time it might be biting some passed out teen's head. If a wolf is prey testing and you fail to educate the wolf/s terminally, then next time it might be a school teacher unable to defend herself as she's jogging down a road. It is our duty to educate wolves since we are the ones out in the woods and armed, we must not let wolves loose fear or humans or worse associate us with food or prey. I'm against shooting wolves 1000 yards away without a valid tag in your pocket, just as I'm against shooting a wolf that turns inside out trying to flee if you "bumped noses" on a trail somewhere unless you have a tag in your pocket. But to let an aggressive wolf run you up a tree/truck/camper or take your dog is unconscionable. We need to all be packing a handgun in wolf country and we need to be terminating any wolf that fails to flee immediately once your presence is known to them. To do otherwise is self centered, selfish and creating a worse problem for someone else down the road. I understand in this thread the person did not see the wolves but I'm talking general terms.
This really is the most pathetic thread I've seen here. Good grief, some of you must be afraid of your own shadows.
Ever wonder why we went to such great lengths to completely eliminate the wolf from North America, long after we'd taken steps to protect and revive the populations of other predators like bears and cougars?
No, the right way is to take out the ones causing trouble and keep the rest trimmed to a reasonable sustaining population.
I think it is unconscionable to have a wolf encounter end with a favorable outcome to the wolves.
But to let an aggressive wolf run you up a tree/truck/camper or take your dog is unconscionable. We need to all be packing a handgun in wolf country and we need to be terminating any wolf that fails to flee immediately once your presence is known to them. To do otherwise is self centered, selfish and creating a worse problem for someone else down the road. I understand in this thread the person did not see the wolves but I'm talking general terms.