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Wolves were killed off in Washington in the early 1900s. But earlier this century, they started to return, migrating from Idaho and British Columbia.
The article says that the bios and environmentalist oppose this. Any idea why?
Quote from: GBoyd on February 06, 2015, 04:11:31 PMThe article says that the bios and environmentalist oppose this. Any idea why?Because they would have the pack numbers to speed up delisting==wolves getting shot.
Quote from: mulehunter on February 05, 2015, 02:10:17 PMWolves were killed off in Washington in the early 1900s. But earlier this century, they started to return, migrating from Idaho and British Columbia.There is that lie again the reporters keep telling it about wolves. I guess they figure it becomes true if they tell it enough.I know for a fact wolves were in the north cascades in the early 90's since I saw them. I think I read the other day about wolves in the state in the 80's. Maybe the wolf huggers just want to take credit for the wolves and they can't take credit for the earlier ones?
Funny........I think it was '92 that I saw wolves by Lake Wentchee. They even had signs up (I think WDFW had put them up) to warn people of wolves. Why are the wolves today able to reproduce and spread out from NE Washington but the wolves from the 80's and 90's apparently were unable to take hold? Makes no sense to me.
Quote from: kodiak 907 on February 06, 2015, 01:26:28 PM I say bring them on over. Might help out with the cat problem on the west side as well. HUH ? I would rather have cougars around rather than some damn wolves I can appreciate the cougar but I can not stand hearing about all this wolf crap ..Yeah they can bring them over and I will gladly help with the reproduction Soon as one gets killed they will have a warrant for my house ! Lmao
I say bring them on over. Might help out with the cat problem on the west side as well.
The attached map shows the wolf zones. I marked a red X where they should consider dropping off a pack, but that won't happen so maybe the blue X? Drop them outside the rez and let them work their way onto it.QuoteThere are 15,000 horses trying to survive on the reservation’s 410,000 acres of shrubb-steppe rangeland, 10 times more than experts believe the land can sustain.This overpopulation puts the horses at risk of starvation, especially in the winter. But a Yakama Nation report shows that overpopulation also destroys the range’s fragile vegetation, spreads weeds, damages wetlands and reduces the land’s ability to support native wildlife. horse overpopulation article
There are 15,000 horses trying to survive on the reservation’s 410,000 acres of shrubb-steppe rangeland, 10 times more than experts believe the land can sustain.This overpopulation puts the horses at risk of starvation, especially in the winter. But a Yakama Nation report shows that overpopulation also destroys the range’s fragile vegetation, spreads weeds, damages wetlands and reduces the land’s ability to support native wildlife.
Quote from: Curly on February 06, 2015, 02:53:13 PMThe attached map shows the wolf zones. I marked a red X where they should consider dropping off a pack, but that won't happen so maybe the blue X? Drop them outside the rez and let them work their way onto it.QuoteThere are 15,000 horses trying to survive on the reservation’s 410,000 acres of shrubb-steppe rangeland, 10 times more than experts believe the land can sustain.This overpopulation puts the horses at risk of starvation, especially in the winter. But a Yakama Nation report shows that overpopulation also destroys the range’s fragile vegetation, spreads weeds, damages wetlands and reduces the land’s ability to support native wildlife. horse overpopulation articleThat's prime squatch country Curly!