Free: Contests & Raffles.
In about 1992 I sat in a WDFW Commission meeting and listened to the WDFW testify to the commission that we had wolves in the Pasayten and they wanted to close coyote hunting to prevent accidental wolf shootings. THEY KNEW THEY WERE HERE IN WASHINGTON THEN!
This is not reasonable:"We don't know at this point whether the den where the pup was born was in Washington or British Columbia," Allen said. "We plan to monitor the pack next spring to determine the den location. If the den is in Washington, the pack can be considered a Washington pack; if the den is in British Columbia, it is a Canadian pack. Our Canadian colleagues are aware of wolf activity in that area, and will assist with monitoring on their side of the border."
This is not reasonable:"We don't know at this point whether the den where the pup was born was in Washington or British Columbia," Allen said. "We plan to monitor the pack next spring to determine the den location. If the den is in Washington, the pack can be considered a Washington pack; if the den is in British Columbia, it is a Canadian pack. Our Canadian colleagues are aware of wolf activity in that area, and will assist with monitoring on their side of the border." A successful breeding wolf pack is documented by locating a breeding pair of adults with two or more pups that survive until Dec. 31, Allen said. So we don't count a cross-border pack as a Washington pack, unless the den is located in Washington? That is ludicrous. If a pack territory includes land in Washington, it is a Washington pack. A den is a small hole in the ground within a territory; the area used by the pack should be the determining criteria. This isn't like establishing citizenship, for f***'s sake!Following this logic, only animals born in WA would be under the jurisdiction of WDFW. Wildlife is the property of the citizens of the state in which it is found, at the time it is found. I am flabbergasted that WDFW would not "count" a pack if it establishes a den outside the border.
We are bordered by 2 states and a Provence with significant wolf populations or soon will have, what a joke
QuoteWe are bordered by 2 states and a Provence with significant wolf populations or soon will have, what a joke That is the simplest explanation I have ever heard as to how the wolves came to be in Washington.I think we have a winner.
I tend to agree that the populations Should be managed with disregard for state boundaries. Clearly the wolves don't know the difference. The problem with that approach is evident with the whole wyoming management debacle. Those animals are being managed as a population (within the region) and idaho and montana are being screwed by wyomings plan (or lack of).
Part of Washington is in the same region and there is no plan. No plan at all is worse than Montana or Idaho. In a free society, is an insult to common sense to expect many different legislative bodies to arrive at the same conclusion. That is something we might have expected out of the former Iraq. It reminds me of when Sadaam Hussein was re-elected to office. Apparently all provinces conformed and agreed that he was the right choice. Because we are free to choose, if some want to manage wolves in a manner different than others. Let them. It is not as though the species is about to become extinct.