Free: Contests & Raffles.
Yes I know that Elk have swam the river. The Coulville Indians planted a bunch of Elk on there land several years ago and shot up the herd so much that they swam the river to get away! I would think a wolf could to, but only in search of food if there was no food on there side of the river. All the locals in northern Lincoln county want to keep the Elk thing quite. The wolf thing on MY hunting ground now, makes me very angry. I am going to go back over there between X-mas and New Years for some yotes. Maybe I can see a wolf then in the snow and take some pics and post them.
MITP3, Since you seem to have good information regarding the ability of the Coulville Tribe maybe you can help me understand something. What kinds of predator management are you allowed on the Rez? What kind are allowed in the Ceded hunting area? What tools that that tribe uses that others (tribes) could emulate? I know that the Quinault use Bear baiting and have awesome bear hunting. It is also my understanding that running hounds is OK? I think that because tribes are less inhibited, by bunny hugging do gooders, they will likely be the driving force to help our wildlife state wide. I have also heard rumor that the Coulville are thinking about petitioning the Feds to manage wolves. What insight can you lend us?
Quote from: GrainfedMuley on October 19, 2011, 06:56:31 AMYes I know that Elk have swam the river. The Coulville Indians planted a bunch of Elk on there land several years ago and shot up the herd so much that they swam the river to get away! I would think a wolf could to, but only in search of food if there was no food on there side of the river. All the locals in northern Lincoln county want to keep the Elk thing quite. The wolf thing on MY hunting ground now, makes me very angry. I am going to go back over there between X-mas and New Years for some yotes. Maybe I can see a wolf then in the snow and take some pics and post them.I think you mean the Colville Indians, not the Coulville Indians for starters. Secondly I think you should get your facts straight before you go and say something as ignorant as they planted a bunch of elk on there land (incorrect use of their) several years ago and shot up the herd so much that they swam the river to get away. If you knew anything about what you were talking about you would realize that directly across the river from Lincoln County is the Hellsgate Wildlife Reserve, which is a limited draw area for Colville Tribal Members, that is only open for archery season elk once a year, and furthermore is only open for deer when it is decided the population could use a hunt strictly for conservation purposes. Not only do these elk on the reserve not get pressured, but the reservation as a whole has some of the highest elk numbers in the state. The elk did not swim the river because of tribal members shooting up the herd and pushing them into the water, but rather they swam the river because elk migrate from one area to another quite frequently. Deer, Moose, Bighorn Sheep, and Bears all swim the river back and forth from Lincoln County to the Reservation and vice versa, it also happens further down the river back and forth into Douglas County. I know this to be fact because not only was I born in Coulee, but i lived my entire life on the Colville Indian Reservation up until the time i left for college, and I have witnessed this happening my entire life. I have spent the last 5 years working for the National Park Service, with a large portion of my time dedicated to being on the river and you would be amazed at the amount of animals that swim across on a regular basis. As far as the elk go on the Colville Indian Reservation, it has been one of the greatest success stories in the pacific northwest, so much so that the US Fish and Wildlife gave a grant to the Colville Tribe for its role in conservation, which they in turn are putting into the reintroduction and population recovery of Bighorn Sheep. This last winter nearly 3 dozen sheep were transplanted into this same reserve, which just so happens to also be directly across from the Lincoln herd of Bighorns that the state manages. Sure enough by spring there were bighorns swimming back and forth quite regularly. Big game animals migrate, and it has nothing to do with the tribal members across the river. If you got away from the west side of the state for longer than just opening weekend of rifle season maybe you would fully understand the habits of these animals, and also realize that the Colville Indian Reservation has some of the best hunting this state has to offer, with large populations of trophy animals, and i can tell you one thing, that does not come from poor wildlife management practices.
http://www.krem.com/your-news/132147253.htmlposted to KREM 2 this morning crappy video but you can hear a faint wolf calling back to him
Sorry for the delay on the pic, just caught up to this. Here is a photo, the shell is a 30-06. This mud was dry and hard.