Free: Contests & Raffles.
That "save our elk" website is the dumbest thing I've ever seen. It's just redneck sensationalism.
According to that study, if I am reading it right, a collection of 5 known packs killed 61 elk in a one month period in 1997. Project that to about 700 elk in one year, not counting deer, moose, or bison. What will they eat when the elk are gone? Also noted that the number of wolves almost doubled in one year (from 1997 to 1998)
QuoteThat "save our elk" website is the dumbest thing I've ever seen. It's just redneck sensationalism. Pictures interviews movies articles facts = redneck sensationalism! Now that's someone with there head in the sand.I would like you to debunk any of the information they have with any hard evidence they are just over sensationalism anything.You think there just making up this for what reason? What is your reasoning for that statement? Is it that it makes you uncomfortable with your beliefs and that maybe everything the bleeding hearts have piped into your head might not be true?Do you think the pictures of the cow elk with there asses eating out to get to the calf that is about to be born are PHOTO SHOPED? Information seems to be coming from Federal and State Government, and Mediahttp://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/mammals/severity/results.htm#table1http://www.yellowstonepark.com/MoreToKnow/ShowNewsDetails.aspx?newsid=10Cathy Ellis, Special to Calgary Herald; Canwest News ServicePublished: Mar 6th, 2008 Alaska Governor Sarah Palin just for some examples off there fact pageI will stop and listen to any thing informed you have to rebuttel, but for now i have a hard time understanding how people can think bringing in another predator that is not even native to the area is a good idea they should not even be here for starters. We should not even have to worry about a management program for the Canadian Gray Wolf !
Quote from: hunt4 on December 30, 2008, 04:08:57 PMQuoteThat "save our elk" website is the dumbest thing I've ever seen. It's just redneck sensationalism. Pictures interviews movies articles facts = redneck sensationalism! Now that's someone with there head in the sand.I would like you to debunk any of the information they have with any hard evidence they are just over sensationalism anything.You think there just making up this for what reason? What is your reasoning for that statement? Is it that it makes you uncomfortable with your beliefs and that maybe everything the bleeding hearts have piped into your head might not be true?Do you think the pictures of the cow elk with there asses eating out to get to the calf that is about to be born are PHOTO SHOPED? Information seems to be coming from Federal and State Government, and Mediahttp://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/mammals/severity/results.htm#table1http://www.yellowstonepark.com/MoreToKnow/ShowNewsDetails.aspx?newsid=10Cathy Ellis, Special to Calgary Herald; Canwest News ServicePublished: Mar 6th, 2008 Alaska Governor Sarah Palin just for some examples off there fact pageI will stop and listen to any thing informed you have to rebuttel, but for now i have a hard time understanding how people can think bringing in another predator that is not even native to the area is a good idea they should not even be here for starters. We should not even have to worry about a management program for the Canadian Gray Wolf !After revisiting the site and really studying some of the material, I'm sticking to my guns. This is the dumbest "wildlife management" site I have ever seen. They have taken multiple studies and letters from professionals and totally changed the context. The have also taken some extreme 'liberties' in their assumptions about wolf predation.See the speech by the west yellowstone director and shoe me where he says the goal of the wolf reintro was designed to remove 30,000 ranchers from public land.I (btw) am in favor of revisiting grazing leases and removing some of the animals from public property. I'm also in favor of increased habitat protection and road closures. I've said it here before- weeds are a bigger threat to our elk than wolves are. If the habitat exists we can have both.
I am not particularly excited about having wolves in this state, but the one thing that has me concerned is when will they get delisted and managed. Idaho, Montana and Wyoming are still fighting to get them delisted and managed. If I remember correctly the wolf management plan in our state calls for fifteen breeding pairs just to get delisted. Now the other states had a number given to them and they watched as that number was passed and is still growing and there doesn't seem to me that they are going to be delisted anytime soon because of litigation. I think that is what lies in wait for us. Even if we hit that number they have set, we won't get to hunt them and manage them until it well exceeds their minimum of getting them off the list and then it will all go to hell with the courts and litigation for years because of groups like Defenders of Wildlife, etc.
So I was reading this thread and I have several strong opinions myself on wolves, humans, and prey animals. I fear that many of these opinions may be very unpopular but here it goes. First off, I would like to say I hunt and I enjoy hunting. I enjoy game meat and I enjoy getting out into the woods. I also enjoy the feeling of self-sufficiency I get from bringing home a game animal. That being said let me voice my opinions on this wolf issue. Someone said they are part of the ecosystem. I agree whole-heartedly with this. Wolves, humans, and prey have lived together for what some archeologists believe to be upwards of 40,000 years. Now suddenly in the last 200 years we will not tolerate the existence of other predators. We humans are the only predators I can think of that will go out of their way to kill the "opposition". You don't see bears hunting wolves or wolves hunting cougars even though if one of more these predators didn't exist then there would be conceivably more game for the others (you may point to that youtube vid where the wolves killed that yote, but it looked to me like the wolves were defending their kill as opposed to seeking out their competitors, as if coyotes are much by way of a competitor at all). So why do we feel compelled to hate/fear wolves? Since the advent of agriculture and its encroachment onto hunter-gather type cultures, we have felt like the land and anything in or on it is ours by right. This mindset has led to huge losses of wilderness through logging, mining, and development. I repeatedly see people here referring to "our" elk, or "our" game. What makes it ours other then the fact that we are here? By that same logic, these prey animals, if they belong to anyone, belong as much to the wolves as us, or even more theirs since they have been here much longer then our race has. Perhaps now we feel as though the wolves are the intruders since in our short memory, there have been none. But remember, wolves were here long before the first of our ancestors were even thinking about crossing the ocean. Someone mentioned that these 'intruding wolves' are in-fact Canadian wolves, not timber wolves. Well, as far as I know there is one species of wolf in NA, the grey wolf. This species is divided into three or four other varieties based more on geographic occurrence than actual genetic difference: Arctic wolves, red wolves (may be a true subspecies, not sure), grey/timber wolves, and mexican wolves. Therefore, to say that any migrating wolves in WA do not belong would be similar to saying that we do not belong and should go back to Europe.Some people have expressed fears regarding the impact of wolves on their hunting. Will there be an impact? Probably. However, I was reading a study done in Yellowstone on yearly wolf predation. Something like 3 monitored packs were bringing down 30-35 elk a month (measured in March and Nov). Projecting that over a year gives a maximum of 410 elk lost to 3 packs of wolves. Now think about predator/prey relationships. That being said, the number of predators always follows the number of prey. A spike in elk populations will be followed by an increase in predators. Likewise, a decrease in elk will be followed by a decrease in predators. The number of predators and prey is never stable in nature, but only fluctuates about some mean. Now, throw in humans who are independent of this system. That is, we have other means of sustenance which means that as a species we are not effect by fluctuations in prey animals. Therefore, the only limiting factor in how much game we kill is ourselves. And we have an incomplete understanding of these fragile relationships (yes incomplete, no matter how many biologists we put in the field there will always some new variable that we will uncover that will throw off our predictions). As a result we are the single largest threat to game.I guess my point here is this: If you want to point fingers for a decrease in game and harder hunting point it toward over population of people. More people = more hunting which says nothing of our encroachment onto these animals habitat. So don't be so anti-wolf. They have every right to be here and are much more healthy for the ecosystem then we are, no matter how good our 'management' plan is.