collapse

Advertisement


Author Topic: Wolf in Stevens County!  (Read 7147 times)

Offline Elkslayer

  • Washington For Wildlife
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Longhunter
  • *****
  • Join Date: Nov 2007
  • Posts: 850
Wolf in Stevens County!
« on: January 27, 2009, 09:42:29 PM »
 I know there has been confirmed sittings of them here, even one killed on the highway out near tum-tum.
I was talking to a buddy today that drives log-truck. He was between Hunters and Cedonia on Highway 25 and saw two coyotes eating on a deer out in a field. While he was watching them a wolf came out of the timber and the coyotes took off like a bat out of hell. He stopped the truck and got out the bino's to make sure and he swares that it was a wolf.
"YOU MUST FACE YOUR CHALLENGES HEAD ON IN ORDER TO SUCCEED."

Offline TopOfTheFoodChain

  • Trade Count: (+1)
  • Scout
  • ****
  • Join Date: Jan 2009
  • Posts: 498
  • Location: Kelso
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #1 on: January 27, 2009, 09:49:21 PM »
Great, just what we need.  :mgun2:

Offline bowhunterforever

  • Non-Hunting Topics
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Old Salt
  • ******
  • Join Date: Oct 2008
  • Posts: 8540
  • Location: Lincoln, Co
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #2 on: January 27, 2009, 09:53:48 PM »
Dam that sucks! :(
You sure you know how to skin griz pilgram

Offline 00 aught buck

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Pilgrim
  • *
  • Join Date: Jan 2009
  • Posts: 23
  • Location: Lincoln WA
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #3 on: January 27, 2009, 09:56:45 PM »
Just kill every one you see..

Offline bow4elk

  • Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
  • Washington For Wildlife
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Frontiersman
  • *****
  • Join Date: Nov 2007
  • Posts: 3412
  • Location: Olympia, WA
  • Contact me at: tom@pnwbowhunting.com
    • https://www.facebook.com/pacific.northwest.bowhunting/
    • Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #4 on: January 27, 2009, 10:01:08 PM »
Hope he reported that vermin!!!  Anyone see the article in the new Bowhunter?  It appears to be about the "big mistake" of the wolf re-introduction but I haven't read it yet.  What a mess!
Official Measurer: Pope and Young Club, NW Big Game Inc., National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association, Oregon Shed Hunters
First Hunt Foundation mentor
Washington State R3 Coordinator

Pacific Northwest Bowhunting http://www.pnwbowhunting.com

Offline TopOfTheFoodChain

  • Trade Count: (+1)
  • Scout
  • ****
  • Join Date: Jan 2009
  • Posts: 498
  • Location: Kelso
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #5 on: January 27, 2009, 10:04:28 PM »
King Obama will save us from the wolves! :kneel:

Offline Elkslayer

  • Washington For Wildlife
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Longhunter
  • *****
  • Join Date: Nov 2007
  • Posts: 850
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #6 on: January 27, 2009, 10:07:29 PM »
Not sure if he reported it or not, but I know I did. Warden will go over that way tomorrow and check it out.
"YOU MUST FACE YOUR CHALLENGES HEAD ON IN ORDER TO SUCCEED."

Offline bow4elk

  • Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
  • Washington For Wildlife
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Frontiersman
  • *****
  • Join Date: Nov 2007
  • Posts: 3412
  • Location: Olympia, WA
  • Contact me at: tom@pnwbowhunting.com
    • https://www.facebook.com/pacific.northwest.bowhunting/
    • Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #7 on: January 27, 2009, 10:15:42 PM »
Not sure if he reported it or not, but I know I did. Warden will go over that way tomorrow and check it out.

Well done - everyone needs to act.  Let no sighting go unspoken!
Official Measurer: Pope and Young Club, NW Big Game Inc., National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association, Oregon Shed Hunters
First Hunt Foundation mentor
Washington State R3 Coordinator

Pacific Northwest Bowhunting http://www.pnwbowhunting.com

Offline andrew_12gauge

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2007
  • Posts: 1152
  • Location: Nampa, Idaho
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #8 on: January 27, 2009, 10:25:12 PM »
the problem is the delisting of the wolves in idaho and montana was about to pass and then obama took office and put that on hold so the popuations are going to continue to go unchecked for another 4 years at least because we know that obama isnt going to let his people down

Offline logger

  • Political & Covid-19 Topics
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Oct 2007
  • Posts: 1142
  • Location: troutlake wa.
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #9 on: January 27, 2009, 11:25:07 PM »
sorry but logtruck drivers are full of *censored*, I got two of em . now if you said you seen em I would take that as the gosphel.
go ahead on er.

Offline Ridgeratt

  • Washington For Wildlife
  • Trade Count: (+11)
  • Old Salt
  • ******
  • Join Date: Sep 2008
  • Posts: 5875
  • IBEW 73 (Retired) Burden on the working class.
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #10 on: January 28, 2009, 12:35:20 AM »
There has been a confirmed wolf kill in  Stevens county last year!

http://www.spokesmanreview.com/breaking/story.asp?ID=11430


I hope this links. Anyway I was talking to the Game warden this fall about it he told me that there is a pair up there the male has a track that is 4x3. I asked if it had a radio collar and was told they had been tracking it for a couple of years. 2 days later in the same area I saw what was a snow white Sheppard with the brightest cobalt blur collar on. Watched her run a clear cut for 15 minutes. linked below

Wolf-kill confirmed in Washington
James Hagengruber
Staff writer
September 8, 2007

Any doubts over the return of wolves to Washington were erased Friday when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed that a calf in northeastern Washington had recently been killed by a wolf.

The livestock death is believed to be the first in Washington caused by a wolf since the predators were effectively erased from the state through bounty-hunting, poisoning and trapping in the 1930s.

The calf was brought down, and partially eaten, sometime after dark Sunday in a wooded pasture near the Stevens County border community of Laurier. Rancher Len McIrvin believes it’s at least the second calf killed by wolves on his Diamond M Ranch in recent days – not enough was left from another dead calf to positively determine its cause of death.

ADVERTISEMENT
 
“We’ve known they were coming,” McIrvin said of wolves. “It was just a matter of time.”

A federal wildlife agent traveled to the scene Tuesday to study the carcass of the most recently killed calf. The agent skinned the remnants of the calf and photographed bite marks, said Tom Buckley, spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service. Photos and measurements were also taken of large canine footprints found in the area.

The evidence was interpreted by experienced wildlife agents in Idaho, where wolf kills have been taking place since the predators were reintroduced a decade ago. The Idaho experts determined the calf had, in fact, been killed by a wolf, Buckley said.

Live traps were set up on the ranch Friday in hopes of capturing the culprit. Because wolves in Washington remain protected as an endangered species – under both state and federal laws – agents hope to attach a tracking collar on the wolf in order to monitor its movements, Buckley said. There are no plans to kill it.

“If the animal continues to kill cattle and we can prove that’s the animal doing it, we’ll have to revisit that decision,” Buckley said.

The rancher is none-too-thrilled about the prospect of catching and releasing a wolf that has developed a taste for Diamond M beef.

“Turn him right back out with our cattle again? Crazy!” McIrvin said. “This is crazy that you or I cannot protect our livelihood, our stock.”

The state is currently developing a wolf management plan that includes provisions to relocate or kill wolves that eat livestock. The plan will not take effect, however, until wolves are taken off the federal endangered species act list. Delisting is expected to occur in the next year.

McIrvin is also eligible for reimbursement for the lost calf through a trust fund established by the conservation group, Defenders of Wildlife. The fund pays 100 percent of fair market value for livestock confirmed to have been killed by wolves, said Amaroq Weiss, director of Western Species Conservation for the group. Kills in which wolves are considered the “probable” culprits are eligible for 50 percent reimbursement.

Since the fund was established 20 years ago, it has paid out $888,000 to ranchers in five western states, Weiss said. The idea of the fund was to reduce the pain born by ranchers for the return of wolves to the West. “We really empathize with how concerned and frustrated he must feel,” Weiss said of McIrvin.

But McIrvin said the reimbursement program is loaded with red tape. He also said proving wolf kills in the future is going to be difficult on his steep, thickly forested ranch. Often, cows aren’t known to be missing until the fall roundup.

“It’s not like a fenced, irrigated pasture in the Spokane Valley,” he said. “These cattle are running on big, big areas. Rough areas.”

Although McIrvin said he would support a carefully managed wolf population in the state, he said he’s frustrated that the decision to return wolves to the West was made largely by people with little economic interest in the decision.

“It took 200 years to get the West so we could raise stock and the families could make a living,” McIrvin said. “I don’t necessarily have that much against wolves, cougars or coyotes, but if the urban population of our state or nation feels they have to have these furry little varmints, that is fine, but I shouldn’t be the one to subsidize their desires or habits.”

Weiss, with the Defenders of Wildlife, said wolves have brought a variety of ecological and economic benefits to places where they’ve returned. In Yellowstone National Park, for instance, wolf predation on deer and elk has resulted in the resurgence of aspen and willow groves. Researchers have linked the changes to increased bird nesting sites, as well as more cooling shade and habitat for trout streams, Weiss said.

“For the huge trout fishing industry, that should be welcome,” she said.


James Hagengruber can be reached at (208) 765-7126 or e-mail:

Offline zackmioli

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Apr 2008
  • Posts: 2210
  • Location: Tacoma
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #11 on: January 29, 2009, 09:03:44 AM »
wow, so they would rather have birds and shade for trout than have deer and elk... :bash: :bash: :bash:

Offline boneaddict

  • Site Sponsor
  • Administrator
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Legend
  • *****
  • Join Date: Mar 2007
  • Posts: 50471
  • Location: Selah, Washington
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #12 on: January 29, 2009, 04:11:14 PM »
Forgot one Boneit     Shoot it, skin it and sell it on ebay :mgun:   and for the record I am NOT talking about Obama, but the Wolves

Offline bowhuntin

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2007
  • Posts: 1374
  • Location: Auburn
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #13 on: January 29, 2009, 04:35:39 PM »
There has been a confirmed wolf kill in  Stevens county last year!

http://www.spokesmanreview.com/breaking/story.asp?ID=11430


I hope this links. Anyway I was talking to the Game warden this fall about it he told me that there is a pair up there the male has a track that is 4x3. I asked if it had a radio collar and was told they had been tracking it for a couple of years. 2 days later in the same area I saw what was a snow white Sheppard with the brightest cobalt blur collar on. Watched her run a clear cut for 15 minutes. linked below

Wolf-kill confirmed in Washington
James Hagengruber
Staff writer
September 8, 2007

Any doubts over the return of wolves to Washington were erased Friday when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed that a calf in northeastern Washington had recently been killed by a wolf.

The livestock death is believed to be the first in Washington caused by a wolf since the predators were effectively erased from the state through bounty-hunting, poisoning and trapping in the 1930s.

The calf was brought down, and partially eaten, sometime after dark Sunday in a wooded pasture near the Stevens County border community of Laurier. Rancher Len McIrvin believes it’s at least the second calf killed by wolves on his Diamond M Ranch in recent days – not enough was left from another dead calf to positively determine its cause of death.

ADVERTISEMENT
 
“We’ve known they were coming,” McIrvin said of wolves. “It was just a matter of time.”

A federal wildlife agent traveled to the scene Tuesday to study the carcass of the most recently killed calf. The agent skinned the remnants of the calf and photographed bite marks, said Tom Buckley, spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service. Photos and measurements were also taken of large canine footprints found in the area.

The evidence was interpreted by experienced wildlife agents in Idaho, where wolf kills have been taking place since the predators were reintroduced a decade ago. The Idaho experts determined the calf had, in fact, been killed by a wolf, Buckley said.

Live traps were set up on the ranch Friday in hopes of capturing the culprit. Because wolves in Washington remain protected as an endangered species – under both state and federal laws – agents hope to attach a tracking collar on the wolf in order to monitor its movements, Buckley said. There are no plans to kill it.

“If the animal continues to kill cattle and we can prove that’s the animal doing it, we’ll have to revisit that decision,” Buckley said.

The rancher is none-too-thrilled about the prospect of catching and releasing a wolf that has developed a taste for Diamond M beef.

“Turn him right back out with our cattle again? Crazy!” McIrvin said. “This is crazy that you or I cannot protect our livelihood, our stock.”

The state is currently developing a wolf management plan that includes provisions to relocate or kill wolves that eat livestock. The plan will not take effect, however, until wolves are taken off the federal endangered species act list. Delisting is expected to occur in the next year.

McIrvin is also eligible for reimbursement for the lost calf through a trust fund established by the conservation group, Defenders of Wildlife. The fund pays 100 percent of fair market value for livestock confirmed to have been killed by wolves, said Amaroq Weiss, director of Western Species Conservation for the group. Kills in which wolves are considered the “probable” culprits are eligible for 50 percent reimbursement.

Since the fund was established 20 years ago, it has paid out $888,000 to ranchers in five western states, Weiss said. The idea of the fund was to reduce the pain born by ranchers for the return of wolves to the West. “We really empathize with how concerned and frustrated he must feel,” Weiss said of McIrvin.

But McIrvin said the reimbursement program is loaded with red tape. He also said proving wolf kills in the future is going to be difficult on his steep, thickly forested ranch. Often, cows aren’t known to be missing until the fall roundup.

“It’s not like a fenced, irrigated pasture in the Spokane Valley,” he said. “These cattle are running on big, big areas. Rough areas.”

Although McIrvin said he would support a carefully managed wolf population in the state, he said he’s frustrated that the decision to return wolves to the West was made largely by people with little economic interest in the decision.

“It took 200 years to get the West so we could raise stock and the families could make a living,” McIrvin said. “I don’t necessarily have that much against wolves, cougars or coyotes, but if the urban population of our state or nation feels they have to have these furry little varmints, that is fine, but I shouldn’t be the one to subsidize their desires or habits.”

Weiss, with the Defenders of Wildlife, said wolves have brought a variety of ecological and economic benefits to places where they’ve returned. In Yellowstone National Park, for instance, wolf predation on deer and elk has resulted in the resurgence of aspen and willow groves. Researchers have linked the changes to increased bird nesting sites, as well as more cooling shade and habitat for trout streams, Weiss said.

“For the huge trout fishing industry, that should be welcome,” she said.


James Hagengruber can be reached at (208) 765-7126 or e-mail:


They could allow hunting in national parks and solve the problem too. It would also be beneficial to the local economies. If you don't incorporate hunting of an animal like the elk they will over populate and eat them selves out of house and home. The wolves will eventually do the same. The pro wolf people need to come to grips with the fact that humans are part of the ecosystem and are the main reason that there is any sort of balance between predator/prey relationships.

Offline 509er

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Apr 2007
  • Posts: 1446
  • Location: Notellum
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #14 on: January 29, 2009, 04:36:20 PM »
Quote
King Obama will save us from the wolves!

 :chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle:
I've hunted almost everyday of my life, the rest have been wasted.

Offline wints13

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Hunter
  • ***
  • Join Date: Feb 2009
  • Posts: 133
  • Location: Elk Camp, WA
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #15 on: March 31, 2009, 11:41:34 PM »
 :mgun: :tree1:

Offline dave

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Tracker
  • **
  • Join Date: Nov 2008
  • Posts: 96
  • Location: Tacoma WA.
  • 173 and 5/8 p/y taken on public land, WA, late Nov
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #16 on: April 03, 2009, 07:45:42 PM »
       I never reported it but my sons and I were in kititas Co early last spring and we saw a salt n pepper wolf crossing a field at about 200 yards. It was on the move and never looked back. It was on elkheights road If you want to know.
Hunt sharp, hunt hard, or buy a gun!

Offline shag

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Longhunter
  • *****
  • Join Date: Apr 2007
  • Posts: 516
  • Location: Cowlitz County WA.
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #17 on: April 04, 2009, 07:24:38 AM »
The only one I've seen in wash was up white Pass.   We damn near hit it with the truck.   We turned around to try and get a shot...  They are big thats forsure.  Got the blood flowing.
"A free people ought not only to be armed and disciplined,

but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to
maintain a status of independence from any who might
attempt to abuse them, which would include their

own government." -- George Washington

Offline 270Shooter

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Frontiersman
  • *****
  • Join Date: Oct 2008
  • Posts: 3828
  • Location: Yakima
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #18 on: April 04, 2009, 07:43:52 AM »
The only one I've seen in wash was up white Pass.   We damn near hit it with the truck.   We turned around to try and get a shot...  They are big thats forsure.  Got the blood flowing.
:yike: :yike: :yike:. What side of the pass?

Offline EastWaViking

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Jul 2008
  • Posts: 1917
Re: Wolf in Stevens County!
« Reply #19 on: April 04, 2009, 08:33:37 AM »
My Uncle, Who lived in Alaska for over 20 years and was an avid hunter, saw one run across Hwy 2 just north of the Pend Oreille county line several years ago.  If anybody could spot a wolf, not a hybrid or yote, it would be him.

 


* Advertisement

* Recent Topics

Search underway for three missing people after boat sinks near Mukilteo by Platensek-po
[Today at 01:59:06 PM]


Desert Sheds by MADMAX
[Today at 11:25:33 AM]


Nevada Results by cem3434
[Today at 11:18:49 AM]


Last year putting in… by JimmyHoffa
[Today at 11:07:02 AM]


Oregon spring bear by pianoman9701
[Today at 09:54:52 AM]


Best/Preferred Scouting App by follow maggie
[Today at 09:08:20 AM]


Anybody breeding meat rabbit? by HighlandLofts
[Today at 08:25:26 AM]


Sportsman’s Muzzloader Selection by VickGar
[Yesterday at 09:20:43 PM]


Vantage Bridge by jackelope
[Yesterday at 08:03:05 PM]


wyoming pronghorn draw by 87Ford
[Yesterday at 07:35:40 PM]


Wyoming elk who's in? by go4steelhd
[Yesterday at 03:25:16 PM]


New to ML-Optics help by Threewolves
[Yesterday at 02:55:25 PM]


Survey in ? by metlhead
[Yesterday at 01:42:41 PM]


F250 or Silverado 2500? by 7mmfan
[Yesterday at 01:39:14 PM]


Is FS70 open? by yajsab
[Yesterday at 10:13:07 AM]

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal