Free: Contests & Raffles.
10 miles doesn't mean anything to a wolf. They cover that in no time flat and are very regularly moving way further distances.Wolves are no good at hiding insofar as they are noisy and leave tracks/sign absolutely everywhere. I didn't intend to say they were easy to hunt My ID tag is still unnotched too...
Quote from: wolfbait on February 04, 2015, 10:02:11 AMQuote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 09:35:14 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 04, 2015, 09:10:02 AMQuote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 06:50:34 AMPacks don't always stay together. We see singles, doubles, 3's all the time up here. They are often seperated by ten or more miles. That doesn't mean they are not a pack....dosent mean they are either. So what are they? Packs are not as cohesive as some of you seem to think. Reproductive activity is really the deciding factor. Since there are soooo many folks here that see wolves all over the place and know so much about them, perhaps they should think about taking a picture, or figuring out a denning location if there is another pack. It's not terribly hard. Wolves are not much good at hiding. If there is a wolf hiding behind every tree in the Methow, it should be pretty easy to find denning sites if there are other packs that the state is failing to document (which I am not saying is out of the question).If what you say is true why does it take WDFW so long to confirm? Report after report in the Methow Valley and they had to be reported to the WSP before WDFW would finally confirm a pack in the Methow. I think it was 2009-2010 the lookout pack and a pack up in War Cr were seen the same day. According to WDFW every wolf sighting in the Okanogan is a part of the lookout pack.Because they have been dragging their feet, and they are still trying to learn how to get into the wolf business. I'm not familiar with War cr, if there was a wolf or two spotted it would be meaningless.... Animals from the same pack can be separated by ~10 (or more) miles sometimes. We see that up in NE Washington. Singles, pairs and even 3-4 wolves are always moving through the range away from the rest of the pack. They don't always stay together.
Quote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 09:35:14 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 04, 2015, 09:10:02 AMQuote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 06:50:34 AMPacks don't always stay together. We see singles, doubles, 3's all the time up here. They are often seperated by ten or more miles. That doesn't mean they are not a pack....dosent mean they are either. So what are they? Packs are not as cohesive as some of you seem to think. Reproductive activity is really the deciding factor. Since there are soooo many folks here that see wolves all over the place and know so much about them, perhaps they should think about taking a picture, or figuring out a denning location if there is another pack. It's not terribly hard. Wolves are not much good at hiding. If there is a wolf hiding behind every tree in the Methow, it should be pretty easy to find denning sites if there are other packs that the state is failing to document (which I am not saying is out of the question).If what you say is true why does it take WDFW so long to confirm? Report after report in the Methow Valley and they had to be reported to the WSP before WDFW would finally confirm a pack in the Methow. I think it was 2009-2010 the lookout pack and a pack up in War Cr were seen the same day. According to WDFW every wolf sighting in the Okanogan is a part of the lookout pack.
Quote from: jasnt on February 04, 2015, 09:10:02 AMQuote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 06:50:34 AMPacks don't always stay together. We see singles, doubles, 3's all the time up here. They are often seperated by ten or more miles. That doesn't mean they are not a pack....dosent mean they are either. So what are they? Packs are not as cohesive as some of you seem to think. Reproductive activity is really the deciding factor. Since there are soooo many folks here that see wolves all over the place and know so much about them, perhaps they should think about taking a picture, or figuring out a denning location if there is another pack. It's not terribly hard. Wolves are not much good at hiding. If there is a wolf hiding behind every tree in the Methow, it should be pretty easy to find denning sites if there are other packs that the state is failing to document (which I am not saying is out of the question).
Quote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 06:50:34 AMPacks don't always stay together. We see singles, doubles, 3's all the time up here. They are often seperated by ten or more miles. That doesn't mean they are not a pack....dosent mean they are either.
Packs don't always stay together. We see singles, doubles, 3's all the time up here. They are often seperated by ten or more miles. That doesn't mean they are not a pack....
In three years IDFG had 10 BP's and a estimation wolf count of 115 wolves. In 6 + years WDFW has 5 BP's and 52 wolves.
Quote from: wolfbait on February 04, 2015, 10:15:09 AMIn three years IDFG had 10 BP's and a estimation wolf count of 115 wolves. In 6 + years WDFW has 5 BP's and 52 wolves.And whats your point? Wolves unsurprisingly are not growing to the same numbers as Idaho?
Quote from: idahohuntr on February 04, 2015, 12:55:30 PMQuote from: wolfbait on February 04, 2015, 10:15:09 AMIn three years IDFG had 10 BP's and a estimation wolf count of 115 wolves. In 6 + years WDFW has 5 BP's and 52 wolves.And whats your point? Wolves unsurprisingly are not growing to the same numbers as Idaho?Why? Again seems like common sense is being thrown out the window Double the timeline and under half the confirmed number of wolves as neighboring state that is significantly smaller in terms of acreage hard for me to believe.Add to that that Oregon reached there milestone of 7 breeding pairs just seven years after wolves introduced in the Northern Rockies started moving into Oregon from Idaho...
Quote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 10:06:59 AMQuote from: wolfbait on February 04, 2015, 10:02:11 AMQuote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 09:35:14 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 04, 2015, 09:10:02 AMQuote from: WAcoyotehunter on February 04, 2015, 06:50:34 AMPacks don't always stay together. We see singles, doubles, 3's all the time up here. They are often seperated by ten or more miles. That doesn't mean they are not a pack....dosent mean they are either. So what are they? Packs are not as cohesive as some of you seem to think. Reproductive activity is really the deciding factor. Since there are soooo many folks here that see wolves all over the place and know so much about them, perhaps they should think about taking a picture, or figuring out a denning location if there is another pack. It's not terribly hard. Wolves are not much good at hiding. If there is a wolf hiding behind every tree in the Methow, it should be pretty easy to find denning sites if there are other packs that the state is failing to document (which I am not saying is out of the question).If what you say is true why does it take WDFW so long to confirm? Report after report in the Methow Valley and they had to be reported to the WSP before WDFW would finally confirm a pack in the Methow. I think it was 2009-2010 the lookout pack and a pack up in War Cr were seen the same day. According to WDFW every wolf sighting in the Okanogan is a part of the lookout pack.Because they have been dragging their feet, and they are still trying to learn how to get into the wolf business. I'm not familiar with War cr, if there was a wolf or two spotted it would be meaningless.... Animals from the same pack can be separated by ~10 (or more) miles sometimes. We see that up in NE Washington. Singles, pairs and even 3-4 wolves are always moving through the range away from the rest of the pack. They don't always stay together."Because they have been dragging their feet, and they are still trying to learn how to get into the wolf business."That's kind of hard to believe when we include WDFW's history, they didn't seem to have trouble confirming wolves etc. before their money left for the wolf introduction into ID, MT, and Wyoming.In Washington, Feds Opt For Wolf Introduction Over Recovery http://www.skinnymoose.com/bbb/2010/06/08/in-washington-feds-opt-for-wolf-introduction-over-recovery/In 2010, Jasmine of CNW was asked why Scott Fitkin didn't confirm the wolf pack in War Cr? She said Scott Knew of the wolf pack but that it was too expensive to confirm.December 1998 - Twenty-four of the original 35 wolves are known to be alive and are still being monitored. The estimated population in Idaho is 115 wolves. This is the first year that one component of recovery (10 breeding pairs) is attained.http://fishandgame.idaho.gov/public/wildlife/wolves/?getPage=161In three years IDFG had 10 BP's and a estimation wolf count of 115 wolves. In 6 + years WDFW has 5 BP's and 52 wolves.
Washington's wolves have never been hunted and yet WDFW claim the wolves grew by one in 2013 @ an estimate of 52 wolves for the state.Just more fraud and corruption in WDFW's wolf introduction.
Quote from: wolfbait on February 04, 2015, 04:56:17 PMWashington's wolves have never been hunted and yet WDFW claim the wolves grew by one in 2013 @ an estimate of 52 wolves for the state.Just more fraud and corruption in WDFW's wolf introduction.Your statements are false, fraudulent, and corrupt. 1. WDFW does not claim "wolves grew by 1" and 52 wolves is not an "estimate"...and you know this...I used to give you the benefit of the doubt about what a "minimum count" was...but its obvious you are just intentionally spreading false information.2. WDFW did not introduce wolves. While we are on the subject...Here is a press release by RMEF blasting a group for distorting minimum wolf counts/Breeding Pair information. Both extreme sides use the same tactic...one to say there are hardly any wolves and the other to say the State managers are hiding/distorting all the wolf numbers. Both extremist fringe sides need to be called on their BS. I'm very happy to see RMEF and IDFG taking on these radicals!http://www.rmef.org/NewsandMedia/PressRoom/NewsReleases/RMEFCallsOutCenterforBiologicalDiversity.aspx
Quote from: idahohuntr on February 04, 2015, 06:44:23 PMQuote from: wolfbait on February 04, 2015, 04:56:17 PMWashington's wolves have never been hunted and yet WDFW claim the wolves grew by one in 2013 @ an estimate of 52 wolves for the state.Just more fraud and corruption in WDFW's wolf introduction.Your statements are false, fraudulent, and corrupt. 1. WDFW does not claim "wolves grew by 1" and 52 wolves is not an "estimate"...and you know this...I used to give you the benefit of the doubt about what a "minimum count" was...but its obvious you are just intentionally spreading false information.2. WDFW did not introduce wolves. While we are on the subject...Here is a press release by RMEF blasting a group for distorting minimum wolf counts/Breeding Pair information. Both extreme sides use the same tactic...one to say there are hardly any wolves and the other to say the State managers are hiding/distorting all the wolf numbers. Both extremist fringe sides need to be called on their BS. I'm very happy to see RMEF and IDFG taking on these radicals!http://www.rmef.org/NewsandMedia/PressRoom/NewsReleases/RMEFCallsOutCenterforBiologicalDiversity.aspxwell maybe you can educate us??? How is WB's post false, fraudulent, or corrupt?